핵심 개념
A falls decision rule can guide emergency department physicians on when to perform CT imaging for older adults after a fall.
초록
The study suggests a falls decision rule to determine the need for CT imaging in older adults after a fall. The rule emphasizes factors like head impact, neurological deficits, and daily living activities. A simpler-focused rule was also developed for validation. Ordering head CT scans for every older adult who falls is deemed inefficient and costly. The study aimed to exclude intracranial bleeding without unnecessary CT scans. The research assessed predictor variables and enrolled over 4300 older adults to validate the rule. Limitations include the impact of physician discretion on CT scans and undiagnosed intracranial bleeding. The study's findings were published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal.
Key Highlights:
- Falls decision rule for CT imaging in older adults after a fall
- Importance of specific factors like head impact and neurological deficits
- Development of a simpler-focused falls rule for validation
- Inefficiency and costliness of ordering head CT scans for all older adults who fall
- Assessment of predictor variables and validation in a large cohort
통계
The rule has a sensitivity of 98.6%, a specificity of 20.3%, and a negative predictive value of 99.8%.
139 participants (3.2%) experienced clinically important intracranial bleeding within 42 days.
The focused falls rule has a sensitivity of 95% and a specificity of 38%.
인용구
"As with any clinical decision tool, this will have to be validated prospectively before we can adopt it fully. But if validated, this will help ED physicians weekly, if not daily." - Dr. Lauren T. Southerland
"This is the first rule I have seen that includes all older adults, including those with dementia and cancer, who are often excluded from studies." - Dr. Lauren T. Southerland