BACKGROUND:Several groups have reported that a fraction of severely injured patients have abnormal coagulation tests at presentation to trauma centers, even in the absence of significant crystalloid resuscitation. These patients have high mortality, but their prevalence in trauma populations is not clear from the reports.
STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS:Records of all patients admitted to a large urban trauma center during 2000 through 2006 were searched for early measures of common coagulation tests and in-hospital mortality. RESULTS: Abnormal coagulation tests were increasingly frequent with increasing injury severity, ranging from 5 to 43 percent for the prothrombin time as the injury severity scores (ISSs) increased from 5 to more than 45 and 4 to 18 percent for platelet counts of less than 150 ¥ 10 9 per L. Abnormal coagulation tests were associated with excess mortality even below conventional transfusion triggers and this was especially true for the partial thromboplastin time. CONCLUSIONS: Abnormal coagulation tests are common in severely injured patients. Even in the moderately injured, they are associated with higher mortality.
IL-8 and, to a lesser extent, TNF-α demonstrated the most promise in this study to be candidate serum markers of impending ICH and CH. The clinical relevance of this is the suggestion that we may be able to predict impending secondary insults after TBI before the clinical manifestation of these events. Given the known morbidity of ICH and CH, early intervention and prevention may have a significant impact on outcome. This becomes even more important when decisions must be made about timing of interventions. Increased levels of IL-8 and TNF-α in the serum during episodes of ICH and CH imply there are significant systemic effects of these events. These serum biomarkers are promising as diagnostic targets. In addition, further study of the precise role of these molecules may have significant implications for inflammatory system manipulation in the management of severe TBI.
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