Understanding Why Patients Return to the Emergency Department after Mild Traumatic Brain Injury within 72 Hours

scientific article published on 2 April 2015

Understanding Why Patients Return to the Emergency Department after Mild Traumatic Brain Injury within 72 Hours is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

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P356DOI10.5811/WESTJEM.2015.2.23546
P932PMC publication ID4427230
P698PubMed publication ID25987933
P5875ResearchGate publication ID276427050

P50authorLatha GantiQ42923780
P2093author name stringKeith R Peters
Kelsey Hatchitt
Lauren M Conroy
Pratik Shashikant Patel
Sudeep Kuchibhotla
Yasamin Daneshvar
Christa Pulvino
Aakash Bodhit
Sarah Ayala
Lawrence L Lottenberg
P2860cites workDo we really need 24-h observation for patients with minimal brain injury and small intracranial bleeding? The Bernese Trauma Unit ProtocolQ48251143
A randomised trial of compassionate care for the homeless in an emergency departmentQ72172696
[Unscheduled revisits in medical emergency units at the hospital: incidence and related factors]Q77897618
A novel prospective approach to evaluate trauma recidivism: the concept of the past trauma historyQ86970191
Who gets post-concussion syndrome? An emergency department-based prospective analysisQ21999505
TBI surveillance using the common data elements for traumatic brain injury: a population study.Q30595156
Position statement: definition of traumatic brain injuryQ33736392
Low rate of delayed deterioration requiring surgical treatment in patients transferred to a tertiary care center for mild traumatic brain injuryQ37805480
Postconcussion syndrome (PCS) in the emergency department: predicting and pre-empting persistent symptoms following a mild traumatic brain injuryQ38087298
Delayed neurological deterioration after mild head injury: cause, temporal course, and outcomes.Q38122534
Previous trauma as a risk factor for recurrent trauma in rural northern IsraelQ39450807
The urban epidemiology of recurrent injury: beyond age, race, and gender stereotypesQ39451276
Trauma recidivism in a large urban canadian populationQ39699174
Injury recidivism in a rural ED.Q41557257
Progressive hemorrhage after head trauma: predictors and consequences of the evolving injuryQ43856783
Unplanned returns to the accident and emergency department--why do they come back?Q44729089
The emergency department as a pathway to admission for poor and high-cost patientsQ44798958
P433issue3
P921main subjecttraumatic brain injuryQ1995526
P304page(s)481-485
P577publication date2015-04-02
P1433published inThe western journal of emergency medicineQ26842568
P1476titleUnderstanding Why Patients Return to the Emergency Department after Mild Traumatic Brain Injury within 72 Hours
P478volume16

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q47717845Epidemiology of recurrent traumatic brain injury in the general population: A systematic review
Q92855088Examining Canada's return visits to the emergency department after a concussion
Q58781909Seventy-two-hour emergency department revisits among adults with chronic diseases: a Saudi Arabian study
Q64234822Status of Emergency Department Seventy-Two Hour Return Visits Among Homeless Patients
Q60954440Ten-year trends in traumatic brain injury: a retrospective cohort study of California emergency department and hospital revisits and readmissions
Q37118321The value of neurocognitive testing for acute outcomes after mild traumatic brain injury

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