National Institute of Public Health, Research Center on Health Population, Mexico City, Mexico.
Child Abuse Negl. 2011 Nov;35(11):915-23. doi: 10.1016/j.chiabu.2011.05.017. Epub 2011 Nov 21.
Determine the prevalence, clinical signs and symptoms, and demographic and family characteristics of children attending a tertiary care hospital in Mexico City, Mexico, to illustrate the characteristics of abusive head trauma among this population.
This is a cross-sectional descriptive study of infants and children under 5, who suffered head trauma and were admitted to the National Pediatrics Institute in Mexico City, a tertiary care referral center. We reviewed medical records and extracted data on clinical and neurological signs and symptoms, fundus, radiological (long bones, thorax, CAT scan), and laboratory tests. We administered a standardized questionnaire assessing child abuse and neglect to the parents of the children included in the study.
One hundred and twenty children, under 5 presenting with head trauma, were recruited, 13 (11%) were considered abusive head trauma (AbHT) and 107 (89%) were diagnosed as accidental head injury (AcHI). The AbHT group comprised younger infants (mean age 8 months) and the AcHI group included toddlers about an average of 25 months. To account for this significant age difference, we performed a comparison of age matched cases. The children in the AbHT were more likely to be female, the result of the first unintended pregnancy and the children of younger mothers (17-19). Mothers in this group had attended fewer than 5 prenatal care visits and fathers had a history of alcohol abuse. Five (38%) of the 13 AbHT children did not survive their injuries and overall showed greater neurological and respiratory compromise, increased prothrombin time (PT), and lower hematocrit values. The most common intracranial injuries suffered by children in the AbHT group were subdural/epidural hematoma and parenchymal/subarachnoid hemorrhage. Retinal hemorrhage was the most frequent ocular injury.
In a tertiary care children's hospital, 11% of the children presenting with head trauma, were considered of abusive origin. Unintended pregnancy among teen mothers and substance abuse in the father were associated with abusive head trauma in this descriptive study.
确定在墨西哥城一家三级保健医院就诊的儿童虐待性头部外伤的流行率、临床体征和症状以及人口统计学和家庭特征,以说明该人群中虐待性头部外伤的特征。
这是一项针对在墨西哥城国家儿科研究所因头部外伤住院的婴儿和 5 岁以下儿童的横断面描述性研究,该研究所是一家三级转诊中心。我们查阅了病历,并提取了临床和神经体征和症状、眼底、影像学(长骨、胸部、CAT 扫描)和实验室检查的数据。我们对纳入研究的儿童的父母进行了标准化的虐待和忽视儿童评估问卷。
共纳入 120 名因头部外伤就诊的 5 岁以下儿童,其中 13 名(11%)被认为是虐待性头部外伤(AbHT),107 名(89%)被诊断为意外头部损伤(AcHI)。AbHT 组包括年龄较小的婴儿(平均年龄 8 个月),而 AcHI 组包括平均年龄约 25 个月的幼儿。为了说明这种显著的年龄差异,我们对年龄匹配的病例进行了比较。AbHT 组的儿童更有可能是女性,是首次意外怀孕的结果,且母亲年龄较轻(17-19 岁)。该组的母亲接受的产前保健次数少于 5 次,父亲有酗酒史。AbHT 组的 5 名(38%)儿童未能幸存,他们整体表现出更严重的神经和呼吸功能障碍、延长的凝血酶原时间(PT)和较低的血细胞比容值。AbHT 组儿童最常见的颅内损伤是硬膜下/硬膜外血肿和实质/蛛网膜下腔出血。视网膜出血是最常见的眼部损伤。
在一家三级儿童保健医院,11%因头部外伤就诊的儿童被认为是虐待性外伤。在这项描述性研究中,青少年母亲的意外怀孕和父亲的物质滥用与虐待性头部外伤有关。