Author:
Meister Melissa R.,Boulter Jason H.,Yabes Joseph M.,Sercy Erica,Shaikh Faraz,Yokoi Hana,Stewart Laveta,Scanlon Michaela M.,Shields Margaret M.,Kim Alexander,Tribble David R.,Bartanusz Viktor,Dengler Bradley A.
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Penetrating brain injuries are a potentially lethal injury associated with substantial morbidity and mortality. We examined characteristics and outcomes among military personnel who sustained battlefield-related open and penetrating cranial injuries during military conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan.
METHODS
Military personnel wounded during deployment (2009–2014) were included if they sustained an open or penetrating cranial injury and were admitted to participating hospitals in the United States. Injury characteristics, treatment course, neurosurgical interventions, antibiotic use, and infection profiles were examined.
RESULTS
The study population included 106 wounded personnel, of whom 12 (11.3%) had an intracranial infection. Posttrauma prophylactic antibiotics were prescribed in more than 98% of patients. Patients who developed central nervous system (CNS) infections were more likely to have undergone a ventriculostomy (p = 0.003), had a ventriculostomy in place for a longer period (17 vs. 11 days; p = 0.007), had more neurosurgical procedures (p < 0.001), and have lower presenting Glasgow Coma Scale (p = 0.01) and higher Sequential Organ Failure Assessment scores (p = 0.018). Time to diagnosis of CNS infection was a median of 12 days postinjury (interquartile range, 7–22 days) with differences in timing by injury severity (critical head injury had median of 6 days, while maximal [currently untreatable] head injury had a median of 13.5 days), presence of other injury profiles in addition to head/face/neck (median, 22 days), and the presence of other infections in addition to CNS infections (median, 13.5 days). The overall length of hospitalization was a median of 50 days, and two patients died.
CONCLUSION
Approximately 11% of wounded military personnel with open and penetrating cranial injuries developed CNS infections. These patients were more critically injured (e.g., lower Glasgow Coma Scale and higher Sequential Organ Failure Assessment scores) and required more invasive neurosurgical procedures.
LEVEL OF EVIDENCE
Prognostic and Epidemiological; Level IV.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine,Surgery
Reference18 articles.
1. Predictors of outcome in civilian gunshot wounds to the head;J Neurosurg,2014
2. Early in-theater management of combat-related traumatic brain injury: a prospective, observational study to identify opportunities for performance improvement;J Trauma Acute Care Surg,2015
3. In-hospital costs after severe traumatic brain injury: a systematic review and quality assessment;PloS One,2019
4. Management of penetrating brain injury;J Emerg Trauma Shock,2011
5. Long-term outcomes of combat casualties sustaining penetrating traumatic brain injury;J Trauma Acute Care Surg,2012
Cited by
3 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献