We prospectively investigated noninvasive selective brain cooling (SBC) in patients with severe traumatic brain injury.Sixty-six in-patients were randomized into three groups. In one group, brain temperature was maintained at 33 -35°C by cooling the head and neck (SBC); in a second group, mild systemic hypothermia (MSH; rectal temperature 33 -35°C) was produced with a cooling blanket; and a control group was not exposed to hypothermia. Natural rewarming began after 3 days. Mean intracranial pressure 24, 48 or 72 h after injury was significantly lower in the SBC group than in the control group. Mean serum superoxide dismutase levels on Days 3 and 7 after injury in the SBC and MSH groups were significantly higher than in the control group. The percentage of patients with a good neurological outcome 2 years after injury was 72.7%, 57.1% and 34.8% in the SBC, MSH and control groups, respectively. Complications were managed without severe sequelae. Non-invasive SBC was safe and effective.
Objective
We present here a changing of the abbreviated injury scale (AIS). It is called the changed injury severity score (CISS), and significantly outperforms the venerable but dated the injury severity score (ISS) and the new injury severity score (NISS) as a predictor of mortality.
Methods
The CISS is defined as a change of AIS values by raising each AIS severity score (1-6) by a power of 4.12 divided by 30.33 and then summing the three most severe (i.e. highest AIS) regardless of body regions. CISS values were calculated for every patient in two large independent data sets: 3455, 3900 patients treated during a five-year period at the class A grade III comprehensive hospitals in Affiliated Hospital of Hangzhou Normal University (Hangzhou) and Zhejiang Provincial People's Hospital (Zhejiang). The power of CISS to predict morality was then compared with previously calculated NISS values of the same group patients in the two hospitals.
Results
We found CISS was more accurate than NISS to predict the survival. The receiver operating characteristic (ROC) of NISS and CISS in Hangzhou were 0.919 and 0.937 respectively (p=0.026), whereas for Zhejiang were 0.917 and 0.940 respectively (p=0.022). Moreover, CISS provided a better fit throughout its entire range of prediction. Hosmer-Lemeshow (H-L) statistic for NISS and CISS in Hangzhou were 24.00 (p=0.002) and 19.38 (p=0.007), whereas in Zhejiang were 22.70 (p=0.001) and 18.43 (p=0.005) respectively.
Conclusions
CISS is a modified version of NISS/ISS with better statistical property and can be considered in trauma research.
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