Glasgow Coma Scale Scores, Early Opioids, and 4-year Psychological Outcomes among Combat Amputees
Abstract
Morphine and fentanyl are frequently used for analgesia after trauma, but there is debate over the advantages and disadvantages of these opioids. Among combat amputees, intravenous (IV) morphine (vs IV fentanyl) after injury was associated with reduced likelihood of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The previous results were based on military health diagnoses over 2 yr post-injury. The present study followed psychological diagnoses of patients with amputation for 4 yr using military and Department of Veterans Affairs health data. In theater combat casualty records (n = 145) documented Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) scores and/or morphine, fentanyl, or no opioid treatment within hours of injury. We found that (1) GCS scores were not significantly associated with PTSD; (2) longitudinal modeling using four (yearly) time points showed significantly reduced odds of PTSD for patients treated with morphine (vs fentanyl) across years (adjusted odds ratio = 0.40; 95% confidence interval = 0.17-0.94); (3) reduced PTSD prevalence for morphine (vs IV fentanyl; morphine = 25%, fentanyl = 59%, p less than 0.05) was significant, specifically among patients with traumatic brain injury during the first 2 yr post-injury; and (4) PTSD prevalence, but not other disorders (e.g., mood), increased between year 1 (PTSD = 18%) and years 2 through 4 post-injury (PTSD range = 30%-32%).
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Jan 01, 2014
- Accession Number
- ADA618678
Entities
People
- Erin Richard
- Jay Walker
- Kimberly Quinn
- Martin Lebedda
- Michael R. Galarneau
- Peggy Han
- Ted Melcer
- V. F. Sechriest Ii
- Vibha Bhatnagar
Organizations
- Naval Health Research Center