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KMID : 0385920160270060497
Journal of the Korean Society of Emergency Medicine
2016 Volume.27 No. 6 p.497 ~ p.504
Usefulness of New Berlin Definition of Polytrauma for Mortality Prediction in Adult Patients with Major Trauma
Kim In-Hyuk

Seo Kang-Suk
Lee Mi-Jin
Park Jeong-Bae
Kim Jong-Kun
Ryoo Hyun-Wook
Ahn Jae-Yun
Moon Sung-Bae
Lee Dong-Eun
Park Yong-Seok
Choe Michael Sung-Pil
Abstract
Purpose: The terminology that represented major trauma was vague, inconsistent, and lacked validation. The objective of this study is to investigate the new definition of polytrauma in adult patients of major trauma.

Method: A retrospective data of adult major trauma patients [Age¡Ã15, 16¡ÂInjury Severity Score (ISS)<75] from a regional trauma center were collected in period between July 2011 and December 2013 and divided into two groups: polytrauma and non-polytrauma. We compared the demographic, laboratory characteristics, and outcomes in patients with major trauma, polytrauma and non-polytrauma. Univariate associations were calculated, and a multiple logistic regression analysis was used to determine the parameters associated with in-hospital mortality and early death.

Results: A total of 662 patients met the inclusion criteria for major trauma. Of these, 150 (22.7%) met the new polytrauma definition. In the major trauma group, the mean ISS was 22, in-hospital mortality rate was 23.4%, and early death rate was 20.7%. In the polytrauma group, ISS was 27, in-hospital mortality rate was 44.7%, and early death rate was 38.7%. In the non-polytrauma group, ISS was 20, in-hospital mortality rate was 17.2%, and early death rate was 15.4%. Of the five physiologic parameters (systolic blood pressure¡Â90 mmHg, Glasgow Coma Scale¡Â8, base deficit¡Ã6, international normalized ratio¡Ã1.4/activated partial thromboplastin time¡Ã40 seconds, age¡Ã70 years), the lowest in-hospital mortality was found when one parameter was involved (2.5%), and the highest mortality was found when all parameters were involved (100%).

Conclusion: Based on ¡°The new Berlin definition¡±, polytrauma was associated more with in-hospital mortality and early death than non-polytrauma in adults. The five physiologic parameters were correlated with in-hospital mortality.
KEYWORD
Injury severity score, Patient outcome assessment, Polytrauma
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