Poor outcome in postanoxic coma can be reliably predicted with somatosensory evoked potentials and neuron-specific enolase as early as 24 hours after cardiopulmonary resuscitation in a substantial number of patients.
These results suggest that determination of serum levels of glial and neuronal proteins may add to the clinical assessment of the primary damage and prediction of outcome after severe traumatic brain injury.
EAD INJURY IS ONE OF THE most common injuries in the Western world with an estimated incidence of hospitaltreated patients with minor head injury of 100 to 300 per 100 000 population. 1 Minor head injury is commonly defined as blunt trauma to the head, after which the patient has lost consciousness for less than 15 minutes or has a short posttraumatic amnesia of less than 1 hour, or both, as well as a normal or minimally altered mental status on presentation (a Glasgow Coma Scale [GCS] score of 13-15). 2,3 Intracranial complications of minor head injury are infrequent (6%-21%) but potentially life-threatening and may require neurosurgical intervention in a minority of cases (0.4%-1.0%). 3-8 Neurocranial injury that does not require See also pp 1511 and 1551 and Patient Page.
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