EBQ:Canadian Head CT Rule
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incomplete Journal Club Article
Stiell IG, et al. "The Canadian CT Head Rule for patients with minor head trauma". The Lancet. 2001. 357(9266):1391-96.
PubMed Full text PDF
PubMed Full text PDF
Clinical Question
Can a decision rule be used to determine which patients require CT imaging after head trauma?
Conclusion
The Canadian CT head rule is a effective method for determining the need for a patient to receive a non contrast brain CT after head trauma.
Major Points
The trial found that the following criteria had 100% sensitivity for identifying patient at risk for neurologic intervention with minor head injury
- GCS score <15 at 2h post injury
- Suspected open or depressed skull fracture
- Any sign of basal skull fracture (hemotympanum, ‘racoon’ eyes, cerebrospinal fluid otorrhoea/rhinorrhoea, Battle’s sign)
- Vomiting �≥ 2episodes
- Age ≥ 65 years
The moderate risk group (for brain injury on CT) was identified with 95% sensitivity if any of the following were present:
- Amnesia before impact >30 min
- Dangerous mechanism (pedestrian struck by motor vehicle, occupant ejected from motor vehicle, fall from height >3 feet or five stairs)
- Minor head injury is defined as witnessed loss of consciousness, definite amnesia, or witnessed disorientation in a patients with a GCS score of 13–15
