articleNew England Journal of MedicineSep 7, 2016BRONZE OA

Trial of Decompressive Craniectomy for Traumatic Intracranial Hypertension

Leeds General Infirmary · University of Cambridge · +17 more institutions

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Abstract

Background

The effect of decompressive craniectomy on clinical outcomes in patients with refractory traumatic intracranial hypertension remains unclear.

Methods

From 2004 through 2014, we randomly assigned 408 patients, 10 to 65 years of age, with traumatic brain injury and refractory elevated intracranial pressure (>25 mm Hg) to undergo decompressive craniectomy or receive ongoing medical care. The primary outcome was the rating on the Extended Glasgow Outcome Scale (GOS-E) (an 8-point scale, ranging from death to "upper good recovery" [no injury-related problems]) at 6 months. The primary-outcome measure was analyzed with an ordinal method based on the proportional-odds model. If the model was rejected, that would indicate a significant difference in the GOS-E distribution, and results would be reported descriptively.

Citation impact

1,240
total citations
FWCI
83.76
Percentile
100%
References
18
Citations per year

Authors

23

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Decompressive craniectomy
  • Traumatic brain injury
  • Medicine
  • Refractory (planetary science)
  • Surgery
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