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Journal Article

Citation

Nishijima DK, Shahlaie K, Sarkar K, Rudisill N, Holmes JF. Am. J. Emerg. Med. 2013; 31(8): 1244-1247.

Affiliation

Department of Emergency Medicine, UC Davis School of Medicine, Sacramento, CA 95817, USA. Electronic address: daniel.nishijima@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2013, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.ajem.2013.04.035

PMID

23759685

Abstract

STUDY OBJECTIVE: The objective was to compare neurological outcomes at 6 months in older patients with preinjury warfarin or clopidogrel use and mild traumatic intracranial hemorrhage with those without prior use of these medications. METHODS: This was a retrospective study conducted at a Level 1 trauma center from April 2009 to July 2010. Patients older than 55 years with isolated mild head injury (Glasgow Coma Scale score 13-15 and Abbreviated Injury Score < 3 in nonhead body region) were included. Demographic, clinical, and outcome data were abstracted from an existing traumatic brain injury database. The primary end point of unfavorable extended Glasgow Outcome Score at 6 months was compared between patients with and without preinjury warfarin or clopidogrel use. RESULTS: Seventy-seven eligible patients were identified: 27 (35%) with preinjury warfarin or clopidogrel use and 50 (65%) without. Baseline characteristics (sex, Glasgow Coma Scale score, Injury Severity Score, computed tomography score, and in-hospital mortality) were similar between cohorts, although the preinjury warfarin or clopidogrel cohort was older than the control group (P < .05). Patients in the preinjury warfarin or clopidogrel cohort were more likely to have an unfavorable outcome (16/27; 59.3%; 95% confidence interval, 40.7%-77.8%) as compared with those without (18/50; 36.0%; 95% confidence interval, 22.7%-49.3%) (P = .05). CONCLUSION: Older adults with preinjury warfarin or clopidogrel use and mild traumatic intracranial hemorrhage may be at an increased risk for unfavorable long-term neurological outcomes compared with similar patients without preinjury use of these medications.


Language: en

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