Qingbao Zhu, Lei Ye, Liao Guan, Xuefei Ji, Ziao Xu, Hongwei Cheng
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objective: To determine the prognostic impacts of the characteristics in routine plasma and blood tests for patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI).
Methods: A total of 136 consecutive adult patients with TBI were recruited. Blood and plasma routine tests were performed within 24 hours from admission. All patients were briefly followed up at the third month after discharge. We analyzed the prognostic factors with univariate and multifactor logistic regression models in the patients receiving surgical and conservative treatments, respectively.
Results: We found different prognostic factors in the patients receiving diverse treatments. In the patients receiving surgical treatment, infection is the only influencing factor, while in the patients receiving conservative treatment, age (P = 0.004), white blood cell count (WBC) (P = 0.008), and albumin (P = 0.040) were the independent factors of prognosis. In the receiver operator characteristic analysis, the values of area under the curve of these factors were 0.788 for age, 0.695 for WBC, and 0.709 for albumin, respectively. The combined area under the curve of the 3 factors was 0.898.
Conclusions: TBI patients receiving diverse treatments might have different pathophysiologic conditions and different influencing factors of prognosis.
期刊介绍:
World Neurosurgery has an open access mirror journal World Neurosurgery: X, sharing the same aims and scope, editorial team, submission system and rigorous peer review.
The journal''s mission is to:
-To provide a first-class international forum and a 2-way conduit for dialogue that is relevant to neurosurgeons and providers who care for neurosurgery patients. The categories of the exchanged information include clinical and basic science, as well as global information that provide social, political, educational, economic, cultural or societal insights and knowledge that are of significance and relevance to worldwide neurosurgery patient care.
-To act as a primary intellectual catalyst for the stimulation of creativity, the creation of new knowledge, and the enhancement of quality neurosurgical care worldwide.
-To provide a forum for communication that enriches the lives of all neurosurgeons and their colleagues; and, in so doing, enriches the lives of their patients.
Topics to be addressed in World Neurosurgery include: EDUCATION, ECONOMICS, RESEARCH, POLITICS, HISTORY, CULTURE, CLINICAL SCIENCE, LABORATORY SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, OPERATIVE TECHNIQUES, CLINICAL IMAGES, VIDEOS