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Erschienen in: Acta Neurochirurgica 12/2016

25.10.2016 | Clinical Article - Brain Injury

Can early clinical parameters predict post-traumatic pituitary dysfunction in severe traumatic brain injury?

verfasst von: O. Nemes, N. Kovacs, Sz. Szujo, B. Bodis, L. Bajnok, A. Buki, T. Doczi, E. Czeiter, E. Mezosi

Erschienen in: Acta Neurochirurgica | Ausgabe 12/2016

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Abstract

Background

Post-traumatic hypopituitarism is a major complication after severe head trauma. The aim of our study was to evaluate the possible role of early clinical parameters in the development of endocrine deficits.

Methods

Data on endocrine function, on-admission clinical-, laboratory-, and ICU-monitored parameters were available in 63 patients of the surviving 86 severe head injury patients (post-resuscitation GCS under 8) treated at one neurosurgical center during a 10-year period.

Results

Hypopituitarism was diagnosed in 68.3 % of the patients. The most frequently affected pituitary axis was the growth hormone (GH): GH deficiency or insufficiency was present in 50.8 %. Central hypogonadism affected 23.8 % of male patients; hypothyroidism and secondary adrenal failure were found in 22.2 and 9.5 % of the investigated population, respectively. Early onset (within 1 year of brain injury) hypopituitarism was found in 24 patients. No connection was found between the development of hypopituitarism and any of the clinical parameters assessed on-admission or at ICU. Significant correlations were found between early endocrine dysfunctions and surgical intervention (OR: 4.64) and the diagnosis of subdural hematoma (OR: 12). In our population, after road traffic accidents, the development of late-onset hypopituitarism was less prevalent (OR: 0.22).

Conclusions

Since our results do not indicate any reliable predictive parameter for the development of endocrine dysfunction in a cohort of patients with severe traumatic brain injury, regular endocrine screening of this specific patient population seems obligatory.
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Metadaten
Titel
Can early clinical parameters predict post-traumatic pituitary dysfunction in severe traumatic brain injury?
verfasst von
O. Nemes
N. Kovacs
Sz. Szujo
B. Bodis
L. Bajnok
A. Buki
T. Doczi
E. Czeiter
E. Mezosi
Publikationsdatum
25.10.2016
Verlag
Springer Vienna
Erschienen in
Acta Neurochirurgica / Ausgabe 12/2016
Print ISSN: 0001-6268
Elektronische ISSN: 0942-0940
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00701-016-2995-x

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