Causes and Outcome of Unconsciousness in the Accident and Emergency Department of the University of Port Harcourt Teaching Hospital
Main Article Content
Keywords
Altered Mental State, Stroke, Traumatic Brain Injury, Diabetic Emergency
Abstract
Background: Unconsciousness occurs when a patient enters a sleeplike state but cannot be aroused, and it is not due to physiological drowsiness. It is a common presentation in the Accident and Emergency Department (A&E), and a burden to the emergency physician especially when the cause is unknown. The cause of coma may be trauma or non-trauma related. There is a shortage of data on the aetiology and outcome of unconsciousness in developing countries including Nigeria.
Methodology: This cross-sectional study investigates 765 unconscious patients using convenience sampling from September 2023 to June 2024 at the A&E of the University of Port Harcourt Teaching Hospital. The World Health Organization emergency unit form was adapted for this study.
Results: The total population of this study is 765, 55.16% males and 44.84% females. A majority of the cases 81.83% were not related to trauma. The commonest causes of unconsciousness were stroke, diabetic complications & emergencies, traumatic brain injury, metastatic neoplasm, HIV AIDs related disease and hypertensive emergency. Most of the patients 494(64.58%) died while in A&E, 116
(15.16%) were transferred to the ward and 56 (7.58%) were discharged against medical advice.
Conclusion: Unconscious patients are a challenge in the emergency room. Stroke and diabetic emergencies are the commonest causes of non-trauma-related aetiologies while traumatic brain injury is the most common cause of trauma-related aetiology of unconsciousness.
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