Injury pattern, outcome and characteristics of severely injured pedestrian

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Abstract

Background: Pedestrians who are involved in motor vehicle collisions present with a unique trauma situation. The aim of this study was to demonstrate the specific clinical characteristics of this patient population in comparison to injured motor vehicle occupants in the medical emergency setting. Methods: A total of 4435 pedestrian traffic collision victims admitted to hospitals participating at TraumaRegister DGU® between 2002 and 2012 (primary admission, Injury Severity Score, ISS ≥ 9; age ≥ 2years) was assessed and compared to 16,042 severely injured motor vehicle occupants. Analyses included features such as demographic distribution, injury patterns, treatment course, subsequent complications and overall clinical outcome. Results: Severely injured pedestrians more commonly were female (42% vs. 34% of motor vehicle occupants) and children below 16years (12% vs. 2%) or seniors above 60years of age (39% vs. 17%). Pedestrians were injured more severely (ISS: 26 vs. 25; NISS 32 vs. 30) with higher rates of head injuries (64% vs. 47%), pelvic injuries (32% vs. 23%) and lower extremity injuries (52% vs. 43%). Accordingly, pedestrians more commonly presented with Glasgow Coma Scale <9 (36% vs. 28%) and a systolic blood pressure below 90mmHg (18% vs. 13%) accumulating in a worse prognosis (RISC-Score 24% vs. 15%) despite of a shorter on-scene treatment time (26min vs. 38min) and a shorter period from the collision until hospital admission (61min vs. 78min). Finally, pedestrians showed a higher mortality (22% vs. 12%). Conclusion: Severely injured pedestrians represent a challenging patient population with unique injury patterns and high subsequent mortality. Emergency team members should be sensitized to the trigger term "pedestrian" in order to improve the initial emergency management and thus the overall clinical outcome.

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APA

Reith, G., Lefering, R., Wafaisade, A., Hensel, K. O., Paffrath, T., Bouillon, B., & Probst, C. (2015). Injury pattern, outcome and characteristics of severely injured pedestrian. Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine, 23(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13049-015-0137-8

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