# Prognostic Significance of Preoperative Neurological Versus Radiological Deterioration in Older Patients with Moderate-to-Mild Traumatic Brain Injury

**Authors:** Shin Heon Lee, Jong Tae Lee, Yong-sook Park

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/life16010028 · Life · 2025-12-24

## TL;DR

This study finds that neurological decline before surgery is a strong predictor of poor outcomes in older patients with mild-to-moderate traumatic brain injury.

## Contribution

Identifies neurological deterioration as an independent predictor of mortality and poor recovery in older TBI patients.

## Key findings

- Neurological deterioration is strongly linked to higher in-hospital mortality.
- Neurological decline is an independent predictor of poor 6-month functional outcomes.
- Radiological deterioration does not significantly affect mortality or recovery.

## Abstract

Background: The prognostic value of preoperative deterioration in older patients with moderate-to-mild traumatic brain injury (TBI) remains unclear. Therefore, this study aimed to evaluate the impact of preoperative neurological and radiological deterioration on clinical outcomes in this population undergoing surgery. Methods: We retrospectively reviewed patients aged ≥ 65 years with moderate-to-mild TBI (Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) ≥ 9) who underwent surgery between 2013 and 2022. Patients were grouped based on preoperative deterioration, classified as neurological (≥2-point sustained GCS drop lasting more than 1 h) or radiological (new/aggravated imaging lesions). Study outcomes included in-hospital mortality and 6-month functional status. Multivariable logistic regression was performed to identify independent predictors of outcomes. Results: Among 58 patients, preoperative deterioration was observed in 34 (58.6%), including 14 (24.1%) with neurological and 20 (34.5%) with radiological deterioration. In-hospital mortality was significantly higher in patients with neurological deterioration than in those without (57.1% vs. 13.6%; p = 0.002). Radiological deterioration alone was not associated with increased mortality or unfavorable functional outcome at 6 months. Neurological deterioration was an independent predictor of in-hospital death (adjusted odds ratio (OR), 47.9; p = 0.004) and unfavorable 6-month outcome (adjusted OR, 35.0; p = 0.014), whereas radiological deterioration was not. A lower initial GCS was also associated with unfavorable outcomes (adjusted OR, 0.5; p = 0.013). Conclusions: Preoperative neurological deterioration is an independent predictor of in-hospital mortality and unfavorable functional outcome at 6 months in older patients undergoing surgery for moderate-to-mild TBI. These findings underscore clinical neurological decline—not radiologic progression—should guide prognostication and early intervention strategies.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** traumatic brain injury (MONDO:0858950)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Neurological deterioration (MESH:D009422), TBI (MESH:D000070642), neurological decline (MESH:D009461), death (MESH:D003643)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

35 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12842911/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12842911