. . . or even transfer to a trauma center.
Current practice for patients with isolated traumatic intracranial hemorrhage includes emergent neurosurgical evaluation and transfer to a trauma center, yet few patients end up needing any intervention. These authors assessed predictors of clinical deterioration requiring intervention or neurosurgical evaluation in a retrospective cross-sectional study of 404 adult patients who presented to a single trauma center with traumatic intracranial hemorrhage, isolated blunt head injury, and Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) scores ≥13.
Forty-eight patients (11.8%) experienced clinical deterioration, defined as decrease in mental status, worsening neurologic examination result, death, worsening repeat computed tomography scan result, or need for surgery dur…
Reviewing Author
DisclosuresNothing to disclose
DisclosuresNothing to disclose