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Research Article

Improving mortality after extradural haematoma in England and Wales

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Pages 19-23 | Received 27 Feb 2012, Accepted 01 Jul 2012, Published online: 22 Aug 2012
 

Abstract

Introduction. Head injury is an important cause of death and disability in young people, with 1.4 million presentations each year in the UK.Citation Extradural haematoma (EDH) is a potentially fatal head injury, which is easily remedied surgically. Several factors influence the mortality of EDH. The mortality of isolated EDH ranges from 1.2 to 33%.CitationCitationCitationCitation EDH outcome within the UK has not been recently described. Materials and methods. The Trauma Audit and Research Network (TARN) database was used to collate data on patients in England and Wales, with ‘isolated’ EDH between 1997 and 2003. Age, gender, GCS at 1st emergency department (ED), haematoma size, presence of a skull fracture, outcome (alive or dead) and injury-to-operation time were required. Where this time was unavailable, an estimation could be made using another time collected for the patient. Data co-ordinators at several hospitals were contacted in order to collect extra information missing from the database. The mortality for this group was then calculated and comparisons between this and previous series were made. Results. A total of four-hundred and eighty four (484) patients with isolated EDH were identified. One-hundred and ninety-seven (197) patients were operated on in England and Wales in this TARN dataset, between 1997 and 2003 for ‘isolated’ EDH. The mortality rate for this operative series was 2% (4 patients) (95% CI 0.1–4%). The non-operative mortality rate was 3% (95% CI 0.9–5.0%). Conclusion. This study has found a low EDH operative mortality rate of 2%. This is lower than that of previous studies on isolated EDH in the UK. This is likely to be valid as TARN is the largest European trauma registry, although we acknowledge that this first EDH sample derived from UK EDs may represent a selected series.

Acknowledgements

Thanks to the Trauma Audit and Research Network, Hope Hospital, Manchester, for their assistance with this research. Also, thanks to TARN co-ordinators at other hospitals in England who assisted with some extra data collection.

Information

This article is an original research observational study of extradural haematomas (EDH) in England and Wales. Isolated EDH was thought to carry a significant mortality that related to time to theatre. This recent UK series suggests current treatment strategies have resulted in lowering mortality significantly (down to 2%) despite times to theatre being longer than 4 hours post-injury.

TARN stores only anonymised patient data, and approval has been is granted by Patient Information Advisory Group (PIAG, Section 60) for research to be carried out with TARN data under the jurisdiction of Dr Fiona Lecky.

Declaration of interests: The authors report no conflicts of interest. The authors alone are responsible for the content and writing of the article. The study was funded by TARN (Trauma Audit and Research Network). None of the researchers received any funding from TARN to carry out the research or write the paper.

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