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Minor Head Injury In Children

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Minor Head Injury In Children Larry Kleiner Medical Director, Dept of Neurosurgery The Children's Medical Center Mechanisms of injury Age Related birth injury; skull ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Minor Head Injury In Children


1
Minor Head Injury In Children
  • Larry Kleiner
  • Medical Director, Dept of Neurosurgery
  • The Children's Medical Center

2
Head Trauma
3
Definition of Mild head injury
  • Prejudice against children
  • doesnt account for asymetry
  • prejudice against facial injury/intubation
  • doesnt account for brainstem reflexes
  • Glasgow Coma Scale 13-15
  • simple
  • reproducible
  • functional
  • valid predicteur

4
Modification of the GCS
  • Eye opening spontaneous 4
  • to sound
    3
  • to pain
    2
  • none
    1

5
Modification of the GCS
  • Verbalization
  • Appropriate for age 5
  • fixes and follows
  • social smile
  • cries but consolable 4
  • persistent irritability 3
  • restless,lethargy 2
  • none 1

6
Modification of the GCS
  • Motor Response
  • Spontaneous 6
  • localizes to pain 5
  • withdraws 4
  • decorticate 3
  • decerebrate 2
  • none 1

7
Modification of GCS
  • Glasgow-Liege Scale
  • includes brainstem reflexes
  • increases prediction of outcome
  • from 76 to 90 with a .9 confidence level

8
Modification of the GCS
  • Brainstem reflexes/scoring the GLCS
  • fronto-orbicluar 5
  • vertical-oculocephalics 4
  • pupillary reaction to light 3
  • horizontal-oculocephalics
    2
  • oculo-cardiac
    1
  • none
    0

9
Epidemiology
  • 7-8 million head injuries/year
  • 1.5-2.0 million/year with LOC/amnesia
  • - 80 considered minor

10
Epidemiology
  • Trauma leading cause of death age 1-19
  • head injury direct cause in 30-50
  • major factor in 75
  • in MVAs
  • 75 have head injuries
  • 20 have spinal cord injuries

11
Epidemiology
  • Head injury overview
  • 110 has loss of consciousness
  • 250-500,00 hospitalizations/year
  • 4,000 deaths/year
  • 15-20,000 prolonged hospitalizations/year

12
Demographics
  • Compared to severe head injuries
    generally younger
  • higher frequency of students
  • percentage of males is less
  • alcohol less frequently involved

13
Demographics
  • Pediatric head Injury
  • higher death rate under the age of two
  • bimodal distribution- bikes/cars
  • 90 are closed, non-penetrating
  • mortality 1-5
    but rises to 17 if coma gt12hr.
  • 10 of the deaths are lt ten years of age

14
Demographics
  • Children arent little adults
  • Infants arent little children

15
Physiology Unique to Children
  • Skull
  • relation to spine
  • deformability
  • thickness
  • open sutures
  • open fontanel

16
Physiology Unique to Children
  • Meninges
  • wider subarachnoid space over convexity(shear/tear
    ), over all smaller in proportion to brain (less
    buoyancy)
  • dura adherently applied to bone

17
Physiology Unique to Children
  • Brain
  • Increased water content
  • autoregulatory mechanisms
  • pressure/volume compliance shifted left
  • contracoup
  • post traumatic unconsciousness

18
Pediatric post-concussive Syndrome
  • Characteristics
  • Stunned/unresponsive
  • pupils dilated,fixed or
  • anisocoric
  • bradycardia
  • pallor
  • perspiration
  • vomiting
  • Mechanism
  • 1. most likely
  • vasovagal effect
  • 2. some consider
  • post-traumatic
  • seizure effect

19
Treatment
  • Efficacy of head trauma sheets
  • 66 referred to the document
  • 84 found it answered all questions

20
Sequellae at 48 hours
  • headaches 51
  • dizziness 14
  • sleepy 14
  • naus/vomit 12
  • behavioral changes 7
  • memory deficits 5
  • visual changes 3
  • hearing problems 2
  • pupillary change 1.5

21
Sequellae
  • At one week these signs and symptoms are
    approximately halved
  • 27 yet to return to normal function at 48hr,
    13 at by one week
  • 50 with residual complaints at 3 months
  • recovery from cognitive deficits1-3months

22
Sequellae
  • 10-15 have surgical lesions
  • EDH, SDH, ICH, Depressed skull Fx
  • lt1 demonstrate talk and die phenomena

23
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25
sequellae
  • Post Traumatic Seizures
  • In isolation impact or early sz (lt1 week)
  • not indicative of severe head injury
  • not indicative of inc. risk for epilepsy
  • 50 occurred in mild group with normal CT
  • No role for anticonvulsants

26
Classification of Injury
  • Primary
  • scalp laceration, avulsion
  • skull Fx ping-pong linear , depressed
  • open/closed, comminuted, basilar
  • neck soft tissue, bone, vascular
  • brain focal, diffuse

27
Primary Head Injuries
  • Skull fractures of concern
  • open,depressed
  • crosses suture lines
  • crosses known vascular channels
  • arterial
  • dural sinuses
  • enters into sinuses
  • basilar

28
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29
Classification of Head Injury
  • Secondary
  • swelling
  • hemorrhage
  • edema
  • vasospasm
  • seizures
  • hypotension
  • ischemia
  • Metabolic
  • hypoxia/hypercarbia
  • hypo/hypernatremia
  • hyperglycemia
  • hormonal dysregulation
  • dysautonomia
  • nutritional

30
CT Scans of Intracranial Hemorrhage
31
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32
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33
Mechanism of Injury
  • Translational
  • linear
  • focal
  • Acceleration-deceleration
  • rotational
  • concussive-shearing forces

34
Mechanisms of injury
  • Age Related
  • birth injury skull fx via canal vs forceps, CN
  • posterior fossa SDH
  • infant/toddler falls, abuse
  • children falls, bikes, pedestrian-MVA, bike-MVA
  • teens falls, MVA, assaults

35
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36
Triage
  • Approach/attitude
  • apparent stability DOES NOT
    insignificant injury
  • stay directed, utilize protocols- avoid inertia
  • repeat neurologic exam looking for change
  • consider the mechanism of injury-think broadly
  • alcohol level lt.2 doesnt alter neurologic much,
    but consider drug effect

37
Triage
  • History
  • mechanism of injury (should fit what you see)
  • neurologic- recent, remote baseline, SZ, HI
  • general-medical, drugs
  • psychological/educational

38
Triage
  • Physical Exam
  • CGLCS
  • pupils
  • respiratory pattern
  • sensory modalities
  • SEARCH FOR FOCALITY!
  • reflexes
  • DTR
  • cutaneous
  • mental status

39
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41
Signs of Rostro-caudal deterioration
  • decreased LOC
  • headache
  • vomiting
  • visual changes
  • pupilary change
  • Cushing Triad
  • loss of function
  • motor/sensory
  • respiratory pattern
  • change

42
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43
Triage
  • As A Rule
  • Any pupillary inequalitygt 1 mm in a head
    injured child must be attributed to an
    intracranial injury until proven otherwise

44
Pathophysiology
  • Monroe-Kellie doctrine
  • three compartments
  • blood
  • brain
  • CSF
  • change in one requires reciprocal change in the
    others

45
Clinical Findings in 4500 pediatric head injuries
  • Initial LOC
  • normal 56.0
  • confused 30.2
  • major impairment 13.8
  • Vomiting 30.3
  • Skull Fx 26.6
  • linear 72.8
  • depressed 27.2
  • compound 19.7
  • Seizures 7.4
  • paralysis 3.8
  • pupil abn 3.6
  • retinal hem 2.6
  • subdural hem 5.2
  • epidural hem 0.9
  • major sequellae 5.9
  • mortality 5.4

46
Clinical Profile from 937 Pediatric Head Injuries
  • 84 CGCS 13-15
  • Mean age 5.5
  • Malesgtfemales 21
  • Fallsgtpedestrian/MVA
  • 75 alert on admission
  • 13 had surgical lesions
  • 0.3 with CGCS died
  • avg. length of stay 2.8 days

47
Clinical profile
  • Presence of Mass lesions
  • Glasgow Coma Scale 15 7.1
  • Glasgow Coma Scale 14 9.7
  • Glasgow Coma Scale 13 13.6

48
Identifying Risk Facteurs
  • LOC gt16 minutes gt45Xgtrisk of poor outcome
  • small punctate hem/ contusion on CT did not
    adversely effect outcome compared to normal CT.
  • Linear,basilar,depressed skull Fxs did Not effect
    outcome
  • Diastatic and compound depressed skull Fxs had
    poor outcomes respectively 50 vs 14

49
Identifying Risk Facteurs
  • GCGS and the patients MENTAL STATUS were the
    best predicteurs of potential deterioration or
    the presence of a mass lesion

50
Identifying risk facteurs
  • Skull X-ray what role if any??
  • Not essential for decision making process
  • HOWEVER
  • presencegtinc risk of lesion\deterioration
  • useful in penetrating injuries
  • useful in Non-accidental trauma
  • useful in following growing Fx of childhood

51
Etiologies of delayed detoriation
  • Mass lesions EDH/SDH/ICH
  • electrolyte imbalance
  • cerebral edema
  • seizures

52
Recommendations
  • Glasgow Coma Scale 13-14
  • CT scan and admit for observation
  • Glasgow Coma Scale 15 with normal neurologic
    exam/mental status, and normal CT discharge with
    home observation . CT optional?
  • Relevance of duration/presence of LOC- varied
    opinion.

53
RecommendationsConcussion and Sports
  • Confusion w/o amnesia/LOC
  • asymptomatic observation 1/2 hr
  • confusion with amnesia , no LOC
  • observe 24 hr, asymptomatic
  • return to activity after one week
  • LOC formal medical evaluation
  • asymptomatic return to activity in 2-4
    wks

54
Fail-Safe vs the Doomsday EDH
  • Small percentage(lt1) will develop
  • a delayed lesion with Normal original CT
  • In patients with abnormal CT scans
  • 30 of patients
  • develop a delayed lesion not present on first CT
    or worsening of original lesion
  • Most will occur within the first 24-36 hrs

55
Bicycle Facts
  • Helmet laws have reduced mortality 80
  • Bikes are assoc with more childhood injury than
    any other consumer product operated by children
  • Universal use of helmets would prevent one HI
    every 4 min and save a life DAILY
  • 400,000 Rx/yr 1/3 HI
  • 300deaths/yr 80 HI
  • annual cost8 billion
  • 2200/yr sustain permanent disability,
  • helmets would
    prevent 1700
  • helmets reduce risk of injury85

56
Is it a crap shoot?
KNOWLEDGE IS POWER
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