A head injury decreases the chances of survival up to 13 years after the event, in specific among young adults, finds research.
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Injury severity seems to make little difference over the longer term, the findings show. The research work published online in the Journal of Neurology Neurosurgery and Psychiatry.
Although the heightened risk of death was highest in the first year after injury, it persisted for at least a further 12 years, when the head-injured were almost three times as likely to die of circulatory, respiratory, digestive, psychiatric and external causes as their community peers.
Those who had sustained other injuries were also more likely to die of these causes, but the risk was not as high.
The annual rate of death from all causes among the head-injured was almost 31 per 1,000 people compared with just under 14 per 1,000 for those living in the community.
As might be expected, those with more serious injuries were more likely to die than those with mild injuries during the critical first year. But those with mild head injury were also twice as likely to die.
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Deaths among those aged 15 to 54 were more than six times higher than rates among those without a head injury, irrespective of potentially influential factors, such as gender and level of deprivation.
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There are no clear explanations for the higher death rates among the young and middle aged, say the authors.
"The reason for greater vulnerability in younger adults is unclear, but requires further consideration, especially given the particularly higher risk of head injury in younger adults," they say.
Source-Eurekalert