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Table 1 Summary of the patient’s demographic and injury characteristics and the in-hospital outcome

From: Is I-FABP not only a marker for the detection abdominal injury but also of hemorrhagic shock in severely injured trauma patients?

 

noHS noAbd (n = 16)

HS noAbd

(n = 8)

HS Abd

(n = 18)

p value all groups

p value (HS noAbd vs. HS Abd.)

Age

48 (30–56)

44 (27.8–48.5)

44.5 (38–62.8)

0.76

0.64

Sex (male, n, %)

12 (75%)

7 (87.5%)

15 (83.3%)

0.72

1.0

ISS

34.5 (32–41)

34 (33.8–35.8)

42 (36.5–50)

0.13

0.19

AIS

 Head

4 (3–5)

0 (0–4)

0 (0–3)

0.001

0.57

 Face

0 (0–3)

1 (0–2)

0 (0–1)

0.46

0.36

 Chest

3 (3–4)

3 (2–3)

4 (2–5)

0.25

0.20

 Abdominal

0 (0–0)

0 (0–0)

4 (3–4)

< 0.0001

< 0.0001

 Extremity

3 (2–4)

5 (3–5)

3 (2–4)

0.16

0.18

Injury pattern (n, blunt: penetrating)

16: 0

6: 2

16:2

0.14

0.56

ICU length of stay (days)

16 (11.5–23.8)

17.5 (4.5–31.8)

21.5 (10.5–29.0)

0.68

0.74

Hospital length of stay (days)

22 (14.8–35.8)

23.5 (11.0–43.3)

28.0 (18.3–38.8)

0.86

0.78

In-hospital Mortality (n, %)

2 (12.5%)

2 (33.3%)

4 (22.2%)

0.69

1.0

  1. Values are reported as median (interquartile range, IQR) and as percentages
  2. AIS, Abbreviated Injury Scale Score; HS Abd, hemorrhagic shock and abdominal injury; HS noAbd, hemorrhagic shock without abdominal injury; ICU, intensive care unit; ISS, Injury Severity Score; noHS noAbd, no hemorrhagic shock and no abdominal injury