KMID : 1144620200330040227
|
|
Journal of Trauma and Injury 2020 Volume.33 No. 4 p.227 ~ p.235
|
|
Alcohol Intoxication and Glasgow Coma Scale Scores in Patients with Head Trauma
|
|
Park Ji-Soo
Park Tae-Jin Ko Jung-In Yeo Woon-Hyung
|
|
Abstract
|
|
|
Purpose: Alcohol intoxication is commonly associated with traumatic brain injury (TBI), but the influence of alcohol on the Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) score remains unclear. This study investigates the effects of blood alcohol concentration (BAC) on the GCS score in head trauma patients with alcohol intoxication.
Methods: In total, 369 head trauma patients with alcohol intoxication in a 1-year period were retrospectively analyzed. The patients underwent head computed tomography and had a BAC ¡Ã80 mg/dL. Patients were divided into TBI and non-TBI groups. Brain injury severity was further classified using the head Abbreviated Injury Score (AIS). The effects according to 5 BAC groups were examined.
Results: The TBI group consisted of 64 patients (16.2%). The mean BAC was significantly higher in the non-TBI group (293.4¡¾87.3 mg/dL) than in the TBI group (242.8¡¾89.9 mg/dL). The mean GCS score was significantly lower in the TBI group (10.3¡¾4.6) than in the non-TBI group (13.0¡¾2.5). A higher BAC showed a significant association with a lower mean GCS score in the TBI group, but not in the non-TBI group. Above ¡Ã150 mg/dL, higher BACs showed significant odds ratios for a lower GCS score.
Conclusions: The influence of alcohol in patients with head trauma depended on the presence of a brain injury. An association between a higher BAC and a lower GCS score was only observed in patients with TBI. Therefore, if a severe brain injury is suspected based on a GCS evaluation in patients with alcohol intoxication, prompt diagnosis and intensive care should be performed without delay.
|
|
KEYWORD
|
|
Alcohols, Traumatic brain injury, Glasgow Coma Scale, Abbreviated Injury Scale
|
|
FullTexts / Linksout information
|
|
|
|
Listed journal information
|
|
|