Why mortality is still high with modern care of 613 evacuated mass lesions presented as severe head injuries 1999-2009

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Abstract

Of 1,949 successive acute severe head injuries (SHI) over a period of 11 years 1999-2009, 613 (31.5%) underwent evacuation of mass lesions. Mortality at 3 months of evacuated mass (EM) lesions was higher over 10 years compared with that of non-EM lesions (it was overall 22%). The reduction of mortality was significantly less in EM compared with that for non-surgical cases (14.4-9.4% recently) and for the cases that were operated but not for mass evacuation (18.1-12.1%). A few explanations are: first, more SDH (60.5% of the EM recently compared with 45.9% in the first few years); second, more severe cases and older patients with co-morbidities were treated surgically; third, advances in prehospital care brought more severe patients to operative care-the rate of referrals decreased from 61.5% to 52.8% recently; fourth, part of the significant shortening of the injury to NT admission time (163-141 min) vanished owing to the parallel elongation of admission to operation time (95-100 min), thus, the threshold recommendation of 4 h to mass evacuation was achieved in only 52%; fifth, introducing decompressive craniectomy was not associated with outcome improvement. © 2012 Springer-Verlag/Wien.

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Levi, L., Guilburd, J., Soustiel, J., Sviri, G., Constantinescu, M., & Zaaroor, M. (2012). Why mortality is still high with modern care of 613 evacuated mass lesions presented as severe head injuries 1999-2009. In Acta Neurochirurgica, Supplementum (Vol. 114, pp. 301–304). Springer-Verlag Wien. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-7091-0956-4_58

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