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Cited 3 time in webofscience Cited 4 time in scopus
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Association of Flow Rate of Prehospital Oxygen Administration and Clinical Outcomes in Severe Traumatic Brain Injuryopen access

Authors
Hong, Won PyoHong, Ki JeongShin, Sang DoSong, Kyoung JunKim, Tae HanPark, Jeong HoRo, Young SunLee, Seung ChulKim, Chu HyunJeong, Joo
Issue Date
Sep-2021
Publisher
MDPI
Keywords
traumatic brain injury; prehospital; oxygenation; hypoxia; hyperoxia; emergency medical services
Citation
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE, v.10, no.18
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE
Volume
10
Number
18
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/4561
DOI
10.3390/jcm10184097
ISSN
2077-0383
2077-0383
Abstract
The goal of this study was to investigate the association of prehospital oxygen administration flow with clinical outcome in severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) patients. This was a cross-sectional observational study using an emergency medical services-assessed severe trauma database in South Korea. The sample included adult patients with severe blunt TBI without hypoxia who were treated by EMS providers in 2013 and 2015. Main exposure was prehospital oxygen administration flow rate (no oxygen, low-flow 1 similar to 5, mid-flow 6 similar to 14, high-flow 15 L/min). Primary outcome was in-hospital mortality. A total of 1842 patients with severe TBI were included. The number of patients with no oxygen, low-flow oxygen, mid-flow oxygen, high-flow oxygen was 244, 573, 607, and 418, respectively. Mortality of each group was 34.8%, 32.3%, 39.9%, and 41.1%, respectively. Compared with the no-oxygen group, adjusted odds (95% CI) for mortality in the low-, mid-, and high-flow oxygen groups were 0.86 (0.62-1.20), 1.15 (0.83-1.60), and 1.21 (0.83-1.73), respectively. In the interaction analysis, low-flow oxygen showed lower mortality when prehospital saturation was 94-98% (adjusted odds ratio (AOR): 0.80 (0.67-0.95)) and >= 99% (AOR: 0.69 (0.53-0.91)). High-flow oxygen showed higher mortality when prehospital oxygen saturation was >= 99% (AOR: 1.33 (1.01 similar to 1.74)). Prehospital low-flow oxygen administration was associated with lower in-hospital mortality compared with the no-oxygen group. High-flow administration showed higher mortality.
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