Head trauma (peds)

Background

  • Persistence of headache, confusion, and amnesia suggests concussion
  • Worsening of symptoms suggests intracranial injury
  • Scalp hematoma in <2yo is assoc w/ incr risk of skull fx, ICH
  • Clinical symptoms (headache, vomiting, behavior change) do not correlate well with ICH

Work-Up

Do I need to obtain a head CT based on the PECARN Rule?[1]

< 2yr old

  • No CT is necessary if ALL are found:
  1. Normal mental status
  2. No scalp hematoma except frontal
    1. LOC <5s
  3. Non-severe mechanism
    1. Severe mechanism = pedestrian or bicyclist w/o helmet struck by motorized vehicle
    2. Severe mechanism = fall >1m or 3ft
    3. Severe mechanism = head struck by high-impact object
  4. No palpable skull fracture
  5. Normal behavior per parents

>2yr old

  • No CT is necessary if ALL are found:
  1. Normal mental status
  2. No LOC
  3. No vomiting
  4. Non-severe mechanism:
    1. Severe mechanism = pedestrian or bicyclist w/o helmet struck by motorized vehicle
    2. Severe mechanism = fall >2m or 5ft
    3. Head struck by high-impact object
  5. No signs of basilar skull fracture
  6. No severe headache

Disposition

  • Discharge if:
    • Asymptomatic after 2-4hr obs (not vomiting, nl neuro exam, nl mental status)
    • Head CT normal (delayed deterioration after normal CT is near zero)
  • Consider discharge if:
    • Nondisplaced fx w/o intracranial injury (in consultation w/ neurosx)

See Also

External Links

Source

  • Holmes et al. Do Children With Blunt Head Trauma and Normal Cranial CT Require Hospitalization for Neurologic Observation?, Annals of Emergency Medicine, vol 58, 2011
  1. Kupperman N, Holmes JF, Dayan PS, et al: Identification of children at very low risk of clinically-important brain injuries after head trauma: a prospective cohort study. Lancet 374(9696): 1160, 2009