急诊医生面临的艰难抉择:对婴儿和新生儿头部创伤进行常规重复脑计算机断层扫描。

Burak Katipoglu, Nurullah İshak Işık, Ömer Faruk Turan, Safa Dönmez, Yusuf Yavuz, Ensar Durmuş, Attila Bestemir, Dariusz Timler
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:头部外伤是导致死亡和残疾的主要原因。虽然针对严重头部外伤已有标准治疗方案,但对于影像学检查结果呈阳性的婴儿和新生儿轻度头部外伤,却没有明确的后续治疗标准。虽然不建议对中度和轻度头部创伤患儿进行常规脑计算机断层扫描(CT)成像随访,但对婴儿和新生儿进行随访成像的必要性仍不确定:我们的研究是一项回顾性、观察性和描述性研究。经安卡拉埃特里克市医院伦理委员会批准,我们对急诊科就诊的 1 岁以下孤立性头部外伤婴儿进行了审查。纳入标准包括:到急诊科就诊、接受过一次以上的脑部 CT 扫描、头部轻度外伤(格拉斯哥昏迷量表 [GCS] >13)。随访数据不完整或有多次外伤的患者被排除在外。使用 SPSS 统计软件包记录和分析了患者的年龄、性别、外伤机制、初次和随访脑 CT 结果、入院情况和手术过程:在筛选出的 238 名患者中,有 154 人被纳入研究。其中,66.9%为男性,平均年龄为5.99个月。最常见的症状是创伤部位肿胀,占病例总数的 79.2%。最常见的受伤机制是从低于90厘米的高度坠落,占85.1%。5.2% 的患者在后续 CT 检查中发现病理进展,只有 1.9% 的患者需要手术治疗。共有 34.4% 的患者需要住院治疗。脑实质病变患者的随访CT病理进展率更高,住院时间更长:结论:除脑实质病变的病例外,轻度头部创伤婴儿的后续 CT 扫描不会改变患者的预后。研究数据表明,重复成像对孤立性颅骨骨折无益。成像伪影往往导致必须重复扫描,从而增加了辐射暴露。不必要的重复成像会增加辐射暴露和医疗成本。只有一小部分患者表现出颅内病变的进展,只有在出现脑实质损伤时才有理由进行后续成像。有必要进行更大规模的前瞻性研究来证实这些发现。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A challenging decision for emergency physicians: Routine repeat computed brain tomography of the brain in head trauma in infants and neonates.

Background: Head trauma is a leading cause of death and disability. While standard treatment protocols exist for severe head trauma, no clear follow-up standards are available for mild head trauma with positive imaging findings in infants and newborns. Although routine follow-up brain computed tomography (CT) imaging is not recommended for children with moderate and mild head trauma, the necessity for follow-up imaging in infants and newborns remains uncertain.

Methods: Our study is a retrospective, observational, and descriptive study. Infants under 1 year old presenting to the emergency department with isolated head trauma were reviewed with the approval of the Ethics Committee of Ankara Etlik City Hospital. Inclusion criteria included presentation to the emergency department, undergoing more than one brain CT scan, and sustaining mild head trauma (Glasgow Coma Scale [GCS] >13). Patients with incomplete follow-up data or multiple traumas were excluded. Age, gender, mechanism of trauma, initial and follow-up brain CT findings, hospital admission, and surgical procedures were recorded and analyzed using the SPSS statistical package.

Results: Out of 238 screened patients, 154 were included in the study. Of these, 66.9% were male and the average age was 5.99 months. The most common presenting symptom was swelling at the trauma site, observed in 79.2% of cases. The most common mechanism of injury was falling from a height of less than 90 cm, accounting for 85.1% of cases. Pathological progression on follow-up CT was observed in 5.2% of the patients, and only 1.9% required surgical treatment. A total of 34.4% of the patients required hospitalization. Patients with parenchymal brain pathology had a higher rate of pathological progression on follow-up CT and a longer hospital stay.

Conclusion: Follow-up CT scans in infants with mild head trauma do not alter patient outcomes except in cases with brain parenchymal pathology. Study data indicated that repeat imaging is not beneficial for isolated skull fractures. Imaging artifacts often necessitated repeated scans, contributing to increased radiation exposure. Unnecessary repeat imaging escalates radiation exposure and healthcare costs. Only a small percentage of patients exhibited progression of intracranial pathology, justifying follow-up imaging solely in the presence of brain parenchymal injury. Larger prospective studies are necessary to confirm these findings.

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