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Journal ArticleDOI

Controlling for the severity of injuries in emergency medicine research.

TLDR
The authors question when the RTS, ISS, the ISS and age, or the probability of survival calculated using the TRISS method should be used to control for severity of injuries in trauma research.
Abstract
The injury severity score (ISS) and age have been used retrospectively to control for trauma severity. Other control variables such as the revised trauma score (RTS) and the TRISS method (which estimales the probability of survival for each patient) additionally require that values of blood pressure, Glasgow coma scale, and respiratory rale, be recorded in the emergency department. The authors question when the RTS, ISS, the ISS and age, or the probability of survival calculated using the TRISS method should be used to control for severity of injuries in trauma research. Relations between predictor variables and (1) survival to hospital discharge, (2) hospital length of stay for survivors, and (3) length of ICU stay were compared by cause of injury: penetrating, motor vehicle accident, low fall, or other blunt. Data were collected over 12 months for 2,914 consecutive adult patients who died or stayed in five nontrauma and three trauma centers for 48 hours or more. For survival, the false-negative rates of probability of survival calculated using the TRISS method were approximately half that of the ISS and age; no variable adequately explained survival among those with low falls. Combinations of ISS, RTS, and age explained the most variation in lengths of hospital stay among survivors, while ISS explained the most variation in lengths of intensive care unit (ICU) stay. Researchers should consider the ISS with RTS and age to control for severity when lengths of hospital or ICU stay are studied. The TRISS method should be used in studies of survival. In both cases, the RTS which requires data collection in the emergency department must be calculated.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The End of the Injury Severity Score (ISS) and the Trauma and Injury Severity Score (TRISS): ICISS, an International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision-Based Prediction Tool, Outperforms Both ISS and TRISS as Predictors of Trauma Patient Survival, Hospital Charges, and Hospital Length of Stay

TL;DR: In this article, the authors compared the ability of TRISS to ICISS as predictors of survival and other outcomes of injury (hospital length of stay and hospital charges) and found that ICISS would outperform TRISS and TRISS in each of these outcome predictions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Circulating complement proteins in multiple trauma patients--correlation with injury severity, development of sepsis, and outcome.

TL;DR: Determination of C3a concentrations, at the scene of the accident, may prove helpful to assess the severity of the injury and to determine the prognosis, and may be useful as additional parameters to the existing trauma scoring systems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparison of the Injury Severity Score and ICD-9 diagnosis codes as predictors of outcome in injury: analysis of 44,032 patients.

TL;DR: The present study confirms previous work showing that survival risk ratios derived from injured patients' ICD-9 diagnoses codes are as good as or better than ISS as predictors of survival.
Journal ArticleDOI

Injury severity and probability of survival assessment in trauma patients using a predictive hierarchical network model derived from ICD-9 codes.

TL;DR: The study confirms previous work showing that the ICD-9 codes were strongly associated with outcome, and demonstrated that the network created from these data was a better predictor of outcome than the derived ISS.
Journal ArticleDOI

Early predictors of transfusion and mortality after injury: a review of the data-based literature.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors reviewed published data sets on early indicators of mortality after trauma and for the need for transfusion and then, based on these data, to evaluate the risk/benefit ratio of contemporary transfusion strategies in these injured patients.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The injury severity score: a method for describing patients with multiple injuries and evaluating emergency care

TL;DR: Results of this investigation indicate that the Injury Severity Score represents an important step in solving the problem of summarizing injury severity, especially in patients with multiple trauma.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evaluating trauma care: the triss method. trauma score and the injury severity score

TL;DR: The TRISS method as mentioned in this paper is a standard approach for evaluating outcome of trauma care, which uses Anatomic, physiologic, and age characteristics to quantify probability of survival as related to severity of injury.
Journal ArticleDOI

A revision of the Trauma Score.

TL;DR: T-RTS, the sum of coded values of GCS, SBP, and RR, demonstrated increased sensitivity and some loss in specificity when compared with a triage criterion based on TS and GCS values, and RTS demonstrated substantially improved reliability in outcome predictions compared to the TS.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Injury Severity Score revisited

TL;DR: The present study uses the most recent AIS version (AIS-85) to derive relationships between mortality rate and the iss for comtemporary patients with blunt or penetrating injuries and identifies important properties of the iss which should be considered when the measure is used to compare case mix severity in different populations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Geriatric trauma: injury patterns and outcome.

TL;DR: It was found that the Injury Severity Score was not predictive of survival in the elderly injured, but central nervous system injury and hypovolemic shock were predictive of Survival.
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