Keywords

causes of death, traumatic brain injury

 

Authors

  1. Harrison-Felix, Cynthia PhD
  2. Whiteneck, Gale PhD
  3. DeVivo, Michael J. DrPH
  4. Hammond, Flora M. MD
  5. Jha, Amitabh MD, MPH

Abstract

Objective: To investigate causes of death in individuals with traumatic brain injury (TBI).

 

Design: Retrospective cohort study.

 

Setting: Utilized data from the TBI Model Systems National Database, the Social Security Death Index, death certificates, and the US population age-race-gender-cause-specific mortality rates for 1994.

 

Patients: Two thousand one hundred forty individuals with TBI completing inpatient rehabilitation in 1 of 15 National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research-funded TBI Model Systems of Care between 1988 and 2001, and surviving past 1 year postinjury.

 

Main Outcome Measures: Primary cause of death based on the International Classification of Diseases - 9th Revision - Clinical Modification - coded death certificates.

 

Results: Individuals with TBI were about 37 times more likely to die of seizures, 12 times more likely to die of septicemia, 4 times more likely to die of pneumonia, and about 3 times more likely to die of other respiratory conditions (excluding pneumonia), digestive conditions, and all external causes of injury/poisoning than were individuals in the general population of similar age, gender, and race.

 

Conclusion: Long-term follow-up of individuals with TBI should increase vigilance for, and prevention of, diagnoses frequently causing death (circulatory disorders) and diagnoses with a high relative risk of causing death in this population (seizures, septicemia, respiratory and digestive conditions, and external causes of injury).