Title: Minor Head Injury In Children
1Minor Head Injury In Children
- Larry Kleiner
- Medical Director, Dept of Neurosurgery
- The Children's Medical Center
2Head Trauma
3Definition 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
4Modification of the GCS
- Eye opening spontaneous 4
- to sound
3 - to pain
2 - none
1
5Modification of the GCS
- Appropriate for age 5
- fixes and follows
- social smile
- cries but consolable 4
- persistent irritability 3
- restless,lethargy 2
- none 1
6Modification of the GCS
- Spontaneous 6
- localizes to pain 5
- withdraws 4
- decorticate 3
- decerebrate 2
- none 1
7Modification of GCS
- Glasgow-Liege Scale
- includes brainstem reflexes
- increases prediction of outcome
- from 76 to 90 with a .9 confidence level
8Modification 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
9Epidemiology
- 7-8 million head injuries/year
- 1.5-2.0 million/year with LOC/amnesia
- - 80 considered minor
10Epidemiology
- 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
-
11Epidemiology
- Head injury overview
- 110 has loss of consciousness
- 250-500,00 hospitalizations/year
- 4,000 deaths/year
- 15-20,000 prolonged hospitalizations/year
12Demographics
- Compared to severe head injuries
generally younger - higher frequency of students
- percentage of males is less
- alcohol less frequently involved
13Demographics
- 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
14Demographics
- Children arent little adults
- Infants arent little children
15Physiology Unique to Children
- Skull
- relation to spine
- deformability
- thickness
- open sutures
- open fontanel
16Physiology 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
17Physiology Unique to Children
- Brain
- Increased water content
- autoregulatory mechanisms
- pressure/volume compliance shifted left
- contracoup
- post traumatic unconsciousness
18Pediatric 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
19Treatment
- Efficacy of head trauma sheets
- 66 referred to the document
- 84 found it answered all questions
20Sequellae 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
21Sequellae
- 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
22Sequellae
- 10-15 have surgical lesions
- EDH, SDH, ICH, Depressed skull Fx
- lt1 demonstrate talk and die phenomena
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25sequellae
- 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
26Classification of Injury
- Primary
- scalp laceration, avulsion
- skull Fx ping-pong linear , depressed
- open/closed, comminuted, basilar
- neck soft tissue, bone, vascular
- brain focal, diffuse
27Primary Head Injuries
- Skull fractures of concern
- open,depressed
- crosses suture lines
- crosses known vascular channels
- arterial
- dural sinuses
- enters into sinuses
- basilar
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29Classification of Head Injury
- Secondary
- swelling
- hemorrhage
- edema
- vasospasm
- seizures
- hypotension
- ischemia
- Metabolic
- hypoxia/hypercarbia
- hypo/hypernatremia
- hyperglycemia
- hormonal dysregulation
- dysautonomia
- nutritional
30CT Scans of Intracranial Hemorrhage
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33Mechanism of Injury
- Translational
- linear
- focal
- Acceleration-deceleration
- rotational
- concussive-shearing forces
34Mechanisms 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
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36Triage
- 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
37Triage
- History
- mechanism of injury (should fit what you see)
- neurologic- recent, remote baseline, SZ, HI
- general-medical, drugs
- psychological/educational
38Triage
- Physical Exam
- CGLCS
- pupils
- respiratory pattern
- sensory modalities
-
- SEARCH FOR FOCALITY!
- reflexes
- DTR
- cutaneous
- mental status
-
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41Signs of Rostro-caudal deterioration
- decreased LOC
- headache
- vomiting
- visual changes
- pupilary change
- Cushing Triad
- loss of function
- motor/sensory
- respiratory pattern
- change
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43Triage
- As A Rule
- Any pupillary inequalitygt 1 mm in a head
injured child must be attributed to an
intracranial injury until proven otherwise
44Pathophysiology
- Monroe-Kellie doctrine
- three compartments
- blood
- brain
- CSF
- change in one requires reciprocal change in the
others
45Clinical 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
46Clinical 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
47Clinical profile
- Presence of Mass lesions
- Glasgow Coma Scale 15 7.1
- Glasgow Coma Scale 14 9.7
- Glasgow Coma Scale 13 13.6
48Identifying 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
49Identifying Risk Facteurs
- GCGS and the patients MENTAL STATUS were the
best predicteurs of potential deterioration or
the presence of a mass lesion
50Identifying 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
51Etiologies of delayed detoriation
- Mass lesions EDH/SDH/ICH
- electrolyte imbalance
- cerebral edema
- seizures
52Recommendations
- 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.
53RecommendationsConcussion 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
54Fail-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
-
55Bicycle 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
56Is it a crap shoot?
KNOWLEDGE IS POWER