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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2015 Jul 1.
Published in final edited form as: Crit Care Med. 2014 Jul;42(7):1619–1628. doi: 10.1097/CCM.0000000000000306

Table 3.

Comparison of characteristics of subjects with and without usable CT scans.

Usable CT (n=327) No usable CT
(n=73)
p

Age, years 38 (24,52) 28 (22,44) 0.008
Male sex 235 (72) 62 (85) 0.021
Racea <0.001c
 Caucasian 176 (54) 12 (16)
 African American 141 (43) 60 (82)
 Other 10 (3) 1 (1)
BMI (kg/m2) 26.5 (23.1,30.8) 26.0 (23.5,29.2) 0.753
Hypertension 61 (19) 6 (8) 0.031
Diabetes mellitus 20 (6) 4 (5) >0.999
Blunt trauma mechanism 264 (81) 21 (29) <0.001
ISS 22 (19,29) 20 (18,25) 0.003
AIS score abdomen 2 (0,3) 3 (0,4) <0.001
APACHE III 63 (52,76) 66 (55,83) 0.104
First serum Cr (mg/dL) 1.0 (0.9,1.3) 1.3 (1.1,1.4) <0.001
Crystalloid, litersb 3.0 (1.4,5.5) 5.5 (3.0,7.8) <0.001
PRBC, unitsb 0 (0,3) 4 (0,9) <0.001
AKI 66 (20) 28 (38) 0.001
Hospital mortality 27 (8) 5 (7) 0.815

Data are shown as n (%) for categorical variables, mean ± standard deviation for normal continuous variables, and median (interquartile range) for non-normal continuous variables. Definition of abbreviations: CT=computed tomography; BMI= body-mass index; ISS= Injury Severity Score; AIS= Abbreviated Injury Scale; APACHE III= Acute Physiology And Chronic Health Evaluation III; PRBC= packed red blood cells; AKI=acute kidney injury.

a

Investigator-identified; “Other” are Asian (n=10) and American Indian (n=1).

b

Total amount during resuscitation prior to ICU admission.

c

Fisher’s exact test comparing 3 categories.