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Original Article
Comparisons of the Prognostic Predictors of Traumatic Brain Injury According to Admission Glasgow Coma Scale Scores-Based on 1- and 6-month Assessments
Hyun Soo Oh, Wha Sook Seo, Seul Lee, Hosook Song
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2006;36(4):621-629.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.4040/jkan.2006.36.4.621
Published online: March 28, 2017

1Professor, Department of Nursing, College of Medicine, Republic of Korea.

2Graduate student, Department of Nursing, College of Medicine, Republic of Korea.

hsoh@inha.ac.kr

Copyright © 2006 Korean Society of Nursing Science

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  • Purpose
    The purpose of this study was to identify the clinical variables that predict functional and cognitive recovery at 1- and 6-month in both severe and moderate/mild traumatic brain injury patients.
  • Methods
    The subjects of this study were 82 traumatically brain-injured patients who were admitted to a Neurological Intensive Care Unit at a university hospital. Potential prognostic factors included were age, motor and pupillary response, systolic blood pressure, heart rate, and the presence of intracranial hematoma at admission.
  • Results
    The significant predictors of functional disability in severe traumatic brain injury subjects were, age, systolic blood pressure, the presence of intracranial hematoma, motor response, and heart rate at admission. In moderate/mild traumatic brain injury patients, motor response, abnormal pupil reflex, and heart rate at admission were identified as significant predictors of functional disability. On the other hand, the significant predictors of cognitive ability for severe traumatic brain injury patients were motor response and the presence of intracranial hematoma at admission, whereas those for moderate/mild patients were motor response, pupil reflex, systolic blood pressure at admission, and age.
  • Conclusions
    The results of the present study indicate that the significant predictors of TBI differ according to TBI severity on admission, outcome type, and outcome measurement time. This can be meaningful to critical care nurses for a better understanding on the prediction of brain injury patients. On the other hand, the model used in the present study appeared to produce relatively low explicabilities for functional and cognitive recovery although a direct comparison of our results with those of others is difficult due to differences in outcome definition and validation METHODS: This implies that other clinical variables should be added to the model used in the present study to increase its predicting power for determining functional and cognitive outcomes.

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    Citations to this article as recorded by  
    • Predictors of remote outcomes of brain injury
      A. Sh. Sadulaeva, K. I. Lysenko, I. D. Stulin, A. I. Panevin
      Zhurnal nevrologii i psikhiatrii im. S.S. Korsakova.2018; 118(3): 15.     CrossRef
    • A systematic review of factors contributing to outcomes in patients with traumatic brain injury
      Young‐Ju Kim
      Journal of Clinical Nursing.2011; 20(11-12): 1518.     CrossRef

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      Comparisons of the Prognostic Predictors of Traumatic Brain Injury According to Admission Glasgow Coma Scale Scores-Based on 1- and 6-month Assessments
      Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing. 2006;36(4):621-629.   Published online March 28, 2017
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    Comparisons of the Prognostic Predictors of Traumatic Brain Injury According to Admission Glasgow Coma Scale Scores-Based on 1- and 6-month Assessments
    Comparisons of the Prognostic Predictors of Traumatic Brain Injury According to Admission Glasgow Coma Scale Scores-Based on 1- and 6-month Assessments

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