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Neurosurgery:
September 1999 - Volume 45 - Issue 3 - p 468
Clinical Studies

Traumatic Brain Damage in Minor Head Injury: Relation of Serum S-100 Protein Measurements to Magnetic Resonance Imaging and Neurobehavioral Outcome

Ingebrigtsen, Tor M.D., Ph.D.; Waterloo, Knut Psy.D.; Jacobsen, Eva A. M.D., Ph.D.; Langbakk, Bodil M.D.; Romner, Bertil M.D., Ph.D.

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Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The present study was conducted to validate S-100 protein as a marker of brain damage after minor head injury.

METHODS: We studied 50 patients with minor head injuries and Glasgow Coma Scale scores of 13 to 15 in whom computed tomographic scans of the brain revealed no abnormalities. Serum levels of S-100 protein were measured at admittance and hourly thereafter until 12 hours after injury. Magnetic resonance imaging and baseline neuropsychological examinations were performed within 48 hours, and neuropsychological follow-up was conducted at 3 months postinjury.

RESULTS: Fourteen patients (28%) had detectable serum levels of S-100 protein (mean peak value, 0.4 μg/L [standard deviation, ± 0.3]). The S-100 protein levels were highest immediately after the trauma, and they declined each hour thereafter. At 6 hours postinjury, the serum level was below the detection limit (0.2 μg/L) in five (36%) of the patients with initially detectable levels. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed brain contusions in five patients, four of whom demonstrated detectable levels of S-100 protein in serum. The proportion of patients with detectable serum levels was significantly higher when magnetic resonance imaging revealed a brain contusion. In patients with detectable serum levels, we observed a trend toward impaired neuropsychological functioning on measures of attention, memory, and information processing speed.

CONCLUSION: Determination of S-100 protein levels in serum provides a valid measure of the presence and severity of traumatic brain damage if performed within the first hours after minor head injury.

Copyright © by the Congress of Neurological Surgeons

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