Abuse (Nonaccidental Trauma): Difference between revisions

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#ct if ams
#ct if ams
#consider ct if h/o loc, amnesia, sz, HA, vomiting, irritable, behavioral change
#consider ct if h/o loc, amnesia, sz, HA, vomiting, irritable, behavioral change
#if mild sxs, no ct but observe at home
#if mild sxs, no ct but observe
#lower threshold if young <1-2 yrs since skull fx more common and more risk for abuse
#lower threshold if young <1-2 yrs since skull fx more common and more risk for abuse
#image if significant scalp findings
#image if significant scalp findings

Revision as of 18:51, 6 September 2014

Nonaccidental Trauma

  1. abusive head trauma most common cause of traumatic death in infants
  2. risk factors for abuse
    1. infant
    2. lower status
    3. family problems
    4. disability or prematurity of infant
  3. historical alternans, or may present with medical complaints like irreg breathing, apnea, sz, irritable, lethargic, vomiting, poor feeding
  4. retinal hem usually from abuse may rarely be from other trauma
  5. most common abusive lesions are
    1. SAH
    2. subdural
    3. interhemispheric blood
    4. cerebral edema
    5. same lesion not common with accidental trauma but possible
  6. fx assoc with abuse are multiple, bilateral, cross sutures, diastatic, nonparietal, assoc with subdural
  7. skull fx from short fall <3 ft usually linear

Recommendations

  1. ct if ams
  2. consider ct if h/o loc, amnesia, sz, HA, vomiting, irritable, behavioral change
  3. if mild sxs, no ct but observe
  4. lower threshold if young <1-2 yrs since skull fx more common and more risk for abuse
  5. image if significant scalp findings
  6. consider abuse if no hx of trauma, delay in seeking care, changing story, repeated injuries, mismatch of hx with physical exam, wounds of diff stages of healing
  7. call neurosurg if intracranial inj, skull fx depressed or widely diastatic

See also

Source

Adapted from Pani