Impact of a Triage-Based Blunt Trauma Assessment on PECARN Recommendations and Neuroimaging Use in Pediatric Head Injury.

IF 1.6 4区 医学 Q3 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Cheuk Kwok, Jamie Marliere, Shaye Busse, April Taniguchi, Kamal Chavda, Andrea Rivera-Sepulveda
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This study aimed to evaluate the impact of a triage-based blunt trauma assessment (best practice advisory) on Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network (PECARN)-guided recommendations and actual head computed tomography (CT) use in children <18 years old presenting with head injury. We examined agreement between best practice advisory recommendations, PECARN risk categories, and head CT use, as well as risk factors associated with deviation from PECARN guidance. Group comparisons were analyzed by Mann-Whitney rank-sum test, Kruskal-Wallis test, Fisher exact test, or χ2 test, as indicated. Best practice advisory and PECARN agreement was 47%. The best practice advisory aligned with CT use in 39% of cases, whereas PECARN aligned 73%. In children <2 years, 42% received a head CT despite a PECARN recommendation against it (P < .001). In children ≥2 years, 38% received a head CT against PECARN recommendations (P < .001). Overall agreement among best practice advisory, PECARN, and head CT use was 35%. Symptoms such as speech changes, lethargy, altered mood, and gait abnormalities were associated with deviations from PECARN. Findings suggest that although PECARN guides imaging decisions, numerous clinical factors and best practice advisory recommendations influence provider behavior, highlighting opportunities to improve decision support and reduce unnecessary CT scans.

基于分诊的钝性创伤评估对PECARN推荐和儿科颅脑损伤神经影像学应用的影响。
本研究旨在评估基于分诊的钝性创伤评估(最佳实践建议)对儿科急诊应用研究网络(PECARN)指导的建议和实际头部计算机断层扫描(CT)在儿童2试验中的使用的影响,如所示。最佳实践咨询和PECARN协议占47%。在39%的病例中,最佳实践建议与CT使用一致,而PECARN与之一致的比例为73%。在儿童中
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来源期刊
Journal of Child Neurology
Journal of Child Neurology 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
5.30%
发文量
111
审稿时长
3-6 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Child Neurology (JCN) embraces peer-reviewed clinical and investigative studies from a wide-variety of neuroscience disciplines. Focusing on the needs of neurologic patients from birth to age 18 years, JCN covers topics ranging from assessment of new and changing therapies and procedures; diagnosis, evaluation, and management of neurologic, neuropsychiatric, and neurodevelopmental disorders; and pathophysiology of central nervous system diseases.
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