Elham Hosseinalizadeh; Robab Mehdizadeh Esfanjani; Haniyeh Ebrahimi Bakhtavar; Farzad Rahmani
Volume 25, Issue 10 , 2023
Abstract
Background: It is of prime importance to manage trauma patients in the early hours and use easy trauma severity scoring systems to make decisions and evaluate patient prognosis.Objectives: The present study aimed to design a predictive model of the mortality of multi-trauma patients due to traffic accidents.Methods: ...
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Background: It is of prime importance to manage trauma patients in the early hours and use easy trauma severity scoring systems to make decisions and evaluate patient prognosis.Objectives: The present study aimed to design a predictive model of the mortality of multi-trauma patients due to traffic accidents.Methods: This cross-sectional analytical study was performed on 600 patients who suffered from multi-trauma caused by traffic accidents from December 2019 to September 2021. Collected data included age, sex, vital signs, trauma mechanism, involved vehicle in the accident, accident location, and hospital outcome.Results: In this study, 600 multi-trauma cases caused by traffic accidents were evaluated. Among the significant variables included in the regression model, age, Mean Arterial Pressure (MAP), Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS), AVPU (Alert, Verbal response, Pain response, Unresponsive), and vehicle versus fixed objects (in Vehicle 2) in the presence of other variables in the model, significantly predicted patient outcomes. Therefore, with the other variables being constant, one unit increase in the age variable increases the probability of death by 1.04 times, one unit increase in the score of the two variables of MAP and GCS, and also the transfer of trauma mechanism from the fixed object to the vehicle reduces death by 0.92, 0.62, and 0.10 times, respectively. In the AVPU variable, the transition from Alert to Verbal, the transition from Verbal to Pain, and the transition from Pain to Unresponsive increases the probability of death by 32, 104, and 567, respectively.Conclusion: In this study, AVPU, age, MAP, primary GCS, and trauma mechanism due to hitting a vehicle with a fixed object had significantly the highest predictive power of hospital mortality in patients with multiple trauma due to traffic accidents, respectively. It is suggested that further studies be performed to replace the AVPU variable with GCS in the newly designed formulas for calculating the severity of trauma to simplify these scores.
Alireza Ala; Farzad Rahmani; Sahar Shirzadegan; Haniyeh Ebrahimi Bakhtavar; Robab Mehdizadeh Esfanjani
Volume 20, Issue 4 , 2018, Pages 1-6
Abstract
Background: Epistaxis is the most common otolaryngologic emergency. Objectives: The current study aimed at evaluating the therapeutic effect of the Celox® bandage to manage non - traumatic epistaxis in the emergency department.Methods: In the current randomized, clinical trial, 150 patients with ...
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Background: Epistaxis is the most common otolaryngologic emergency. Objectives: The current study aimed at evaluating the therapeutic effect of the Celox® bandage to manage non - traumatic epistaxis in the emergency department.Methods: In the current randomized, clinical trial, 150 patients with non - traumatic epistaxis admitted to the emergency depart- ment in Imam Reza and Sina hospitals affiliated to Tabriz University of Medical Sciences, Tabriz, Iran, during years 2015-2016. The patients were randomly divided into two groups: group 1 dressing with the Celox® band and group 2 dressing with the anterior nasal tampon. The convenient sampling method was employed. Bleeding control (minute), patients’ satisfaction, and lack of rebleeding within the first 24 hours of administration were compared between the two groups. Results: There was no statistically significant difference between the two groups in terms of demographic variables, vital signs, and paraclinical testing results (P > 0.05). With respect to the control of bleeding in the first 5 minutes after management, 93.3% of the bleeding was controlled in the Celox®, and 96% of the bleeding was controlled in the anterior tampon groups (P = 0.467). The satisfaction level of the patients in the Celox® group was greater than that of the tampon group, and the difference was statis- tically significant (P < 0.001). Lack of rebleeding within 24 hours after management had the most significant effect on the patient satisfaction [odds ratio (OR) = 3.969]. Conclusions: Based on the results of the current study, there was no significant difference in bleeding control and the success ratebetween the two groups in the study. Ease of usage, however, makes Celox® a better alternative to control epistaxis. Furthermore, the treatment of epistaxis with Celox® leads to higher satisfaction levels.
Farzad Rahmani; Farzin Rezazadeh; Alireza Ala; Maryam Soleimanpour; Robab Mehdizadeh Esfanjani; Hassan Soleimanpour
Volume 19, Issue 6 , June 2017, , Pages 1-4
Abstract
Background: The reason behind patients’ overcrowding in emergency departments (ED)may be due to several factors such as great number of referring patients or inaccessibility of facilities or hospital beds.Objectives: The present study aimed at evaluating the overcrowding of ED in Tabriz Imam Reza ...
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Background: The reason behind patients’ overcrowding in emergency departments (ED)may be due to several factors such as great number of referring patients or inaccessibility of facilities or hospital beds.Objectives: The present study aimed at evaluating the overcrowding of ED in Tabriz Imam Reza hospital in 2015 using 2 scales: National Emergency Overcrowding Scale (NEDOCS), and Emergency Department Work Index (EDWIN).Methods: This was a cross-sectional descriptive study conducted in the ED of Imam Reza hospital affiliated to Tabriz University of Medical Sciences, Iran, in a one-year period (Jan- Dec 2015). Convenience sampling method was used for data collection. During the study, the researchers randomly selected 10 days out of every month and started to collect index variables 4 times a day at 6 AM, 12 noon, 6 PM, and 12 midnight. In total, 488 samples were gathered and both NEDOCS and EDWIN were implemented for each sample. Then, the frequency of overcrowding in the emergency department was reported based on the obtained results.Results: Based on NEDOCS, ED was extremely busy, but not overcrowded in 51 cases (10.5%), it was overcrowded in 298 (61.1%) cases, severely overcrowded in 138 cases (28.3%), and it was busy only in one case (0.2%). However, based on the EDWIN scale, the ED was active but manageable in 91 cases (18.6%), very busy in 36 cases (7.4%), and extremely busy in the remaining 361 cases (74%).Conclusions: EDWIN scale depicted August, July, December, June, and April to be, respectively, the most overcrowded months. This finding revealed EDWIN scale to perform better when trying to have an overall assessment of ED during the whole year, which helps us have clear- cut results for analysis and policy making in managing EDs.