Title of article :
Simple clinical predictors of brain lesions in patients with impaired consciousness: a cross sectional study from a rural, tertiary hospital in central India
Author/Authors :
Y. Geetadevi، نويسنده , , Rajnish Joshi، نويسنده , , Madhukar Pai، نويسنده , , S.P. Kalantri، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages :
7
From page :
25
To page :
31
Abstract :
Objective To evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of vital signs for detecting brain lesions in patients with impaired consciousness in a rural setting. Methods We enrolled patients older than 12 years who presented with impaired consciousness of non-traumatic origin to the intensive care unit of a rural teaching hospital. The design was a cross sectional analysis of a hospital-based case series, independently comparing vital signs on admission (temperature, pulse, systolic and diastolic blood pressure) against a reference standard (final diagnosis). Diagnostic accuracy was measured by computing multi-level likelihood ratios, and area under the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve. Results We studied 386 patients of whom 242 (62.7%) were men. A total of 178 patients (46%) had a brain lesion. None of the clinical predictors could accurately distinguish between those with and without a brain lesion. The area under the ROC curve for pulse was 0.61 (S.E. 0.02); that for the systolic and diastolic blood pressure 0.70 (S.E. 0.02) each. Systolic BP provided informative test results in 29.7%, diastolic BP in 37.2% and pulse rate in 19.9% patients. Conclusion Our findings suggest that the vital signs lack accuracy for ruling in or ruling out brain lesion in patients with impaired consciousness.
Keywords :
sensitivity , specificity , diagnosis , accuracy , likelihood ratio , Predictors , Brain lesion , Impaired consciousness
Journal title :
Clinical Neurology and Neurosurgery
Serial Year :
2005
Journal title :
Clinical Neurology and Neurosurgery
Record number :
464215
Link To Document :
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