
The role of cardiac morbidity in short- and long-term mortality in injured older patients who survive initial resuscitation.
BACKGROUND: Elderly patients are an increasingly larger group of injured trauma care patients. Comorbidities influence outcome. Little is known of short- and long-term mortality in the elderly who survive initial resuscitation. METHODS: Short- and long-term mortality was retrospectively analyzed in 363 consecutively injured patients (Injury severity score >15) surviving more than 3 days after admission to a level 1 trauma center (including 197 patients >60 years). Cardiac morbidity was the focus. RESULTS: Survival to hospital discharge was similar comparing older patients with the entire group. Mortality increased incrementally with age. In older patients, cardiac morbidity was observed in 28% (fatal in 7); 2-year mortality was 36% (older group) and 60% (patients sustaining cardiac complications). Most elderly (80%) were discharged to long-term care. CONCLUSIONS: Elderly who survive initial resuscitation are as likely to survive to discharge as younger patients, but long-term survival is significantly lower as age increases. Cardiac morbidity is associated with higher long-term mortality. Most elderly are discharged to long-term care.
Duke Scholars
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Related Subject Headings
- Wounds and Injuries
- Treatment Outcome
- Trauma Severity Indices
- Survival Analysis
- Surgery
- Retrospective Studies
- Resuscitation
- Patient Discharge
- Morbidity
- Middle Aged
Citation

Published In
DOI
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Location
Related Subject Headings
- Wounds and Injuries
- Treatment Outcome
- Trauma Severity Indices
- Survival Analysis
- Surgery
- Retrospective Studies
- Resuscitation
- Patient Discharge
- Morbidity
- Middle Aged