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Title: Criteria for the selective use of chest computed tomography in blunt trauma patients.
Author(s): Brink, M. (274712180)
Deunk, J. (314660496)
Dekker, H.M. (298979055)
Edwards, M.J.R. (236181491)
Kool, D.R. (298983222)
Vugt, A.B. van (080098282)
Kuijk, C. van (08554762X)
Blickman, J.G. (080434274)
Publication year: 2010
Document type: Article / Letter to editor
Journal: European Radiology
ISSN: 0938-7994
Volume: vol. 20
Issue: iss. 4
Start page: p. 818
End page: p. 828
Abstract: PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to derive parameters that predict which high-energy blunt trauma patients should undergo computed tomography (CT) for detection of chest injury. METHODS: This observational study prospectively included consecutive patients (>or=16 years old) who underwent multidetector CT of the chest after a high-energy mechanism of blunt trauma in one trauma centre. RESULTS: We included 1,047 patients (median age, 37; 70% male), of whom 508 had chest injuries identified by CT. Using logistic regression, we identified nine predictors of chest injury presence on CT (age >or=55 years, abnormal chest physical examination, altered sensorium, abnormal thoracic spine physical examination, abnormal chest conventional radiography (CR), abnormal thoracic spine CR, abnormal pelvic CR or abdominal ultrasound, base excess <-3 mmol/l and haemoglobin <6 mmol/l). Of 855 patients with >or=1 positive predictors, 484 had injury on CT (95% of all 508 patients with injury). Of all 192 patients with no positive predictor, 24 (13%) had chest injury, of whom 4 (2%) had injuries that were considered clinically relevant. CONCLUSION: Omission of CT in patients without any positive predictor could reduce imaging frequency by 18%, while most clinically relevant chest injuries remain adequately detected.
Subject: NCEBP 2: Evaluation of complex medical interventions
NCEBP 7: Effective primary care and public health
Organization: Radiology
Surgery
Appears in Collections:Academic bibliography

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2066/87857

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