Reprint

Traumatic Brain Injury: Clinical Characteristics and Outcomes

Edited by
November 2022
176 pages
  • ISBN978-3-0365-5527-0 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-0365-5528-7 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Traumatic Brain Injury: Clinical Characteristics and Outcomes that was published in

Medicine & Pharmacology
Public Health & Healthcare
Summary

As many of you already know, traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a growing public health problem of substantial proportions. More than 50 million TBIs occur internationally each year. Across all ages, TBI represents 30–40% of all injury-related deaths, and neurological injury is projected to remain the most important cause of disability from neurological disease until 2030. Severe TBI has a high mortality rate, estimated at 30–40% in observational studies on unselected populations.

Survivors experience a substantial burden of physical, psychiatric, emotional, and cognitive disabilities, which disrupt the lives of individuals and their families, and impose huge costs on society. Wide variations in the clinical manifestations of TBI are attributable to the complexity of the brain and to the pattern and extent of damage.

Over the past few years, a number of multicenter studies on the topic have emerged, helping to provide a better understanding of the condition. However, it is also clear that much remains to be learned.

Format
  • Hardback
License
© 2022 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
traumatic brain injury; scoring system; modified early warning score; mortality; psychometric properties; patient-reported outcome measures; traumatic brain injury; classical test theory; translation; linguistic validation; outcome instruments; traumatic brain injury; cerebral oximetry; near-infrared spectroscopy; traumatic brain injury; cerebrovascular autoregulation; intracranial pressure; acute brain injury; early tracheostomy; late tracheostomy; tracheostomy timing; mortality; ventilatory acquired pneumonia; traumatic brain injury; prehospital; oxygenation; hypoxia; hyperoxia; emergency medical services; osmolality; traumatic brain injury (TBI); hypertonic saline; mannitol; osmolar gap; brain death; death by neurologic criteria; cerebral blood flow; CT angiography; CT perfusion; COVID-19 pandemic; treatment efficiency; traumatic brain injury; emergency department; seizure; traumatic brain injury; QTc interval; spatial QTS-T angle; brain–heart interaction; cranioplasty; cognitive improvement; traumatic brain injury; neuropsychology