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- Title
The effect of polytrauma as a possible confounder in the outcome of monotraumatic vs polytraumatic paraplegic patients: a clinical cohort study.
- Authors
Putz, C; Schuld, C; Gantz, S; Grieser, T; Akbar, M; Moradi, B; Wiedenhöfer, B; Fürstenberg, C H; Gerner, H J; Rupp, R
- Abstract
Study design:Clinical cohort study.Objective:To evaluate if the impact of the severity of the trauma as a possible confounding factor influences the neurological and functional recovery in paraplegia during the course of a 6-month follow-up period after injury.Setting:Spinal Cord Injury Center, Heidelberg University Hospital, Germany.Methods:A retrospective monocentric analysis, from 2002 to 2008, of the Heidelberg European Multicenter Study about spinal cord injury database was performed. We included 31 paraplegic patients (neurological level T1-T12) who were assigned either to a monotrauma (polytraumaschluessel (PTS) 1) or to a polytrauma (PTS2) group. The American Spinal Injury Association Impairment Scale, lower extremity motor score, pin prick, light touch and the spinal cord independence measure (SCIM) were obtained at five distinct time points after trauma. Data were analyzed using Mann-Whitney U-test (α<0.05).Results:The changes in lower extremity motor score, pin prick and light touch showed no significant differences in both groups over the whole evaluation period. Polytraumatic paraplegics showed a significantly delayed increase of SCIM between 2 and 6 weeks compared with monotraumatic patients, followed by a quantitative increase in the subitems bladder management, bowel management, use of toilet and prevention of pressure sores between 3 and 6 months (P=0.031). The mean length of primary rehabilitation in the polytrauma group was 5.5 vs 3.6 months in monotrauma.Conclusions:The prognosis of polytraumatic paraplegics in terms of neurological recovery is not inferior to those with monotrauma. Multiple-injured patients need a prolonged hospital stay to reach the functional outcome of monotraumatic patients.
- Subjects
GERMANY; ANALYSIS of variance; COMPUTER software; LIFE skills; LONGITUDINAL method; MEDICAL cooperation; PARAPLEGIA; RESEARCH; SPINAL cord injuries; TIME; U-statistics; WOUNDS &; injuries; DATA analysis; RETROSPECTIVE studies; SEVERITY of illness index; PROGNOSIS
- Publication
Spinal Cord, 2011, Vol 49, Issue 6, p721
- ISSN
1362-4393
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1038/sc.2010.181