EBQ:PECARN Pediatric Head CT Rule
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Clinical Question
Can children be identified for low risk clinically-important traumatic brain injury and avoid Brain CT imaging.
Conclusion
This validated clinical decision rule provides a means of decreasing brain CT imaging in children with blunt head trauma with a sensitivity of 100% (<2years old) and 96.8% (>2yrs old) for intracraneal injuries
Major Points
This rule was derived from the multicenter PECARN network with both a derivation and validation arm to detect clinically important traumatic brain (ciTBI) injury in children to age 18yrs old after blunt head trauma.
The rule stratifies patients < 2 years old and ≥2 years old.
Rules below are according to the of PECARN Head CT Study[1]
<2 years old
Any 1 of the following?
- GCS ≤14
- Altered Mental Status
- Palpable Skull Fracture
Then obtain a Non-Con Brain CT (4.4% risk of cTBI)
1 or more of the following?
- Non-frontal scalp hematoma
- LOC ≥ 5 seconds
- Severe injury mechanism
- pedestrian or bicyclist without helmet struck by motorized vehicle
- fall >1m or 3ft
- head struck by high-impact object
- Abnormal activity per parents
Then consider a Non-Con Brain CT or Observation (0.9% risk of cTBI)
≥2 years old - 18 years
Any 1 of the following?
- GCS ≤14
- Altered Mental Status
- Signs of a basilar skull fracture
Then obtain a Non-Con Brain CT (4.3% risk of cTBI)
1 or more of the following?
- History of vomiting^
- LOC
- Severe injury mechanism
- Pedestrian or bicyclist without helmet struck by motorized vehicle
- Fall >2m or 5ft
- Head struck by high-impact object
- Severe headache
Then consider a Non-Con Brain CT or Observation (0.9% risk of cTBI)
^Consider observation in place of imaging in children with isolated vomiting (no other indication) as the sole risk factor (0.2% risk of cTBI)[2]
Inclusion Criteria
Children presenting within 24 h of head trauma were eligible.
Exclusion Criteria
Children with trivial injury, ground-level falls, walking or running into stationary objects, no signs or symptoms of head trauma other than scalp abrasions and lacerations, penetrating trauma, brain tumours, pre-existing neurological disorders complicating assessment, or neuroimaging at an outside hospital before transfer.
Interventions
Outcome
Outcome was clinically-important traumatic brain injury (ciTBI) defined apriori as:
- Death from traumatic brain injury
- Neurosurgical intervention for:
- Intracranial pressure monitoring
- Elevation of depressed skull fracture
- Ventriculostomy
- Hematoma evacuation
- Lobectomy
- Tissue debridement
- Dura repair
- Intubation for more than 24 h
- Hospital admission of 2 nights due to CT evidence of TBI
TBI on CT was defined as:
- Intracranial haemorrhage or contusion
- Cerebral edema
- Traumatic infarction
- Diffuse axonal injury
- Shearing injury
- Sigmoid sinus thrombosis
- Midline shift or herniation
- Diastasis of the skull
- Pneumocephalus
- Skull fracture
Primary Outcomes
Secondary Outcomes
Subgroup analysis
Criticisms
Funding
Review Questions
Sources
- ↑ PECARN Rule 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
- ↑ Dayan PS, et al. "Association of Traumatic Brain Injuries with Vomiting in Children with Blunt Head Trauma. June 2014. Annals of EM. 63(6):657-665
