4.4 Article

Comparison of functional outcome following acute care in young, middle-aged and elderly patients with traumatic brain injury

Journal

BRAIN INJURY
Volume 20, Issue 8, Pages 779-790

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/02699050600831835

Keywords

elderly; traumatic brain injury; acute care; outcome

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Primary objective: To compare functional physical and cognitive outcome of patients in three age groups with mild, moderate and severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) at discharge from acute care. Research design: Retrospective database review. Methods and procedures: Scores on the Extended Glasgow Outcome Scale (GOSE) and on the FIM (TM) instrument,(1) discharge destination and length-of-stay (LOS) were gathered and compared for 2327 patients with TBI admitted to a level 1 trauma hospital from 1997-2003 divided into three age groups; 971 patients between 18-39 years, 672 between 40-59 years and 684 aged 60-99 years. Main outcomes and results: Relative to younger adults with similar TBI severity, elderly patients showed worse outcome on the GOSE and FIM (TM) instrument (physical and cognitive ratings) and longer LOS. No difference was observed between the young and middle-aged groups except for cognitive FIM (TM) ratings and LOS for severe TBI. A higher percentage of elderly patients went to in-patient rehabilitation, to long-term care facilities or died compared to young and middle-aged patients. A higher number of young and middle-aged patients were discharged home. Conclusions: Further development of services in early rehabilitation as well as post-rehabilitation geared to the specific needs of the elderly patient with TBI is required as the population ages.

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