Geriatric Emergency Medicine Information Summary: Trauma Kevin Biese. MD, MAT Kristen Barrio, MD Epidemiology • • • •
Patients ≥ 65 years are 10% of all traumas, but 28% of deaths Trauma is the 7th leading cause of death in elderly Falls are the most common trauma mechanism Motor vehicle collision (MVC) is the most fatal trauma mechanism
General Principles • • •
Cardiac and pulmonary disease and medications may limit physiological response to stressors, (i.e. beta blockers, etc) Trauma patients are under-triaged in violation of paramedic protocols Changing trauma team activation thresholds for elderly patients has been shown to decrease mortality
Head Trauma • • • • •
Patients aged >65 y/o have 30-85% mortality with intracranial hemorrhage (ICH) ICH can occur from seemingly minor trauma, such as a fall from standing Age ≥ 65 considered high risk in Canadian age >60 high risk in New Orleans Head CT protocols Subdural hematomas account for majority of findings on Head CT Beware of delayed acute subdural hematoma (DASH) – consider admission for observation even if negative head CT
Warfarin • • • •
Risk of spontaneous ICH on warfarin is 0.3-5.4% Blunt head trauma on warfarin with minimal or no symptoms: 7-14% have ICH Remember patients frequently have supra-therapeutic INR: 11% with INR >5 For patients with head injury on warfarin, reduced mortality if protocol implemented requiring immediate head CT and FFP be ordered
Cervical Spine Trauma • • •
In blunt trauma victims age>65, C-spine fractures are 2x more likely than in younger patients Odontoid fractures: 20% of elderly c-spine fractures compared to 5% in younger patients Patients >65 included in NEXUS criteria and identified as high risk in Canadian C-Spine Rule