Systematic reviews should incorporate as much relevant evidence as possible to reduce bias and research waste and increase reliability of results. Clinical trials registers are a key resource for identifying potentially eligible studies, particularly those that are unpublished, and therefore searching these registers is mandated for best practice systematic reviews. However, the process of searching can be challenging and no clear and consistent guidance on how best to do this exists. This paper provides step-by-step guidance on how to conduct systematic searches for studies using clinical trials registers, with a case study to illustrate each step. The guidance encompasses where to search and how to formulate the search strategy, conduct the search, download results, screen records, obtain data, update searches, and report on these searches.
Study Design.
Retrospective study.
Objective.
The importance of attenuating the cardiovascular autoregulatory disturbances accompanying acute spinal cord injury (SCI) has long been recognized. This report assembles SCI emergency service data and correlates cardiovascular parameters to preserved functional neuroanatomy.
Summary of Background Data.
The nascent nature of evidence-based reporting of prehospital cardiovascular autoregulatory disturbances in SCI indicates the need to assemble more information.
Materials and Methods.
SCI data for <24 hours were extracted from ambulance and hospital records. The mean arterial pressure (MAP) was calculated. The International Standard for Neurological Classification of SCI (ISNCSCI) evaluates the primary outcome of motor incomplete injury (grades C/D) at acute presentation. Logistic regression was adjusted for multiple confounders that were expected to influence the odds of grade C/D.
Results.
A cohort of 99 acute SCI cases was retained; mean (SD) age 40.7±20.5 years, 88 male, 84 tetraplegic, 65 grades A/B (motor complete injury), triage time 2±1.6 hours. The lowest recorded prehospital MAP [mean (SD): 77.9±19, range: 45–145 mm Hg] approached the nadir for adequate organ perfusion. Thirty-four (52%) grade A/B and 10 (30%) C/D cases had MAP readings <85 mm Hg. In data adjusted for age, injury level, and triage time a 5 mm Hg increase in the lowest MAP value was associated with a 34% increase in the odds of having motor incomplete injury at acute presentation (adjusted odds ratio=1.34; 95% CI: 1.11–1.61; P=0.002).
Conclusion.
An important observation with implications for timely and selective cardiovascular resuscitation during SCI prehospital care involves significant negative associations between the depth of systemic hypotension and preserved functional neuroanatomy. Regardless of the mechanism, our confounder-adjusted logistic regression model extends in-hospital evidence and provides a conceptual bedside-bench framework for future investigations.
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