Inova Fairfax Hospital for Children, Falls Church, VA 22042, USA.
Am J Emerg Med. 2012 Oct;30(8):1507-14. doi: 10.1016/j.ajem.2011.12.018. Epub 2012 Mar 3.
The objective of this study is to describe the use of emergent head computed tomography (CT) in young children and ask in which circumstances scans contributed to immediate management.
We reviewed electronic records of children, aged 1 month through 6 years, who received a head CT at a large suburban emergency department between February 2008 and February 2009. Age, sex, chief complaint, history, physical examination, indication for and results of head CT, red flags in history or physical examination, final disposition, and number of head CT scans performed to date were recorded. Abnormalities on CT scans were classified as significant or incidental, and subsequent interventions were documented.
Emergent head CTs were performed on 394 children. The most common indications were trauma, 65%; seizure, 11%; and headache, 6%. Computed tomographic abnormalities were found in 40% (154 children): 32 significant findings,104 incidental findings, and 22 preexisting abnormalities. Four children with significant findings required immediate intervention. They all had red flags in both history and physical examination, and 3 of 4 children had known preexisting pathology; 1 child had nonaccidental trauma. Only 1 child had a significantly abnormal CT with no identifiable red flags; this child was admitted for observation and was discharged within 24 hours. Approximately a third of children had no readily identifiable red flag for the CT scans that they received. Of note, 20% of the young children had received more than 1 head CT scan to date, and 6% had between 6 and 20 scans.
Every child in this sample who required emergency intervention had red flags on history and physical examination. The 35% of CT scans performed in young children without red flags did not contribute usefully to their acute management.
本研究旨在描述婴幼儿急诊头部 CT 的使用情况,并探讨哪些情况下头部 CT 有助于即刻治疗。
我们回顾了 2008 年 2 月至 2009 年 2 月期间在一家大型郊区急诊室接受头部 CT 的 1 个月至 6 岁儿童的电子病历。记录了年龄、性别、主诉、病史、体检、头部 CT 的适应证和结果、病史或体检中的危险信号、最终转归以及迄今为止进行的头部 CT 扫描次数。将 CT 扫描中的异常分为显著异常或偶发异常,并记录了随后的干预措施。
共对 394 例儿童进行了急诊头部 CT 检查。最常见的适应证是创伤,占 65%;癫痫发作占 11%;头痛占 6%。40%(154 例)的儿童发现 CT 异常:32 例为显著异常,104 例为偶发异常,22 例为预先存在的异常。4 例有显著异常的儿童需要立即干预。他们的病史和体检均有危险信号,4 例中有 3 例有已知的预先存在的病理学;1 例有非意外伤害。只有 1 例儿童的 CT 异常无明显可识别的危险信号;该儿童接受观察并在 24 小时内出院。大约三分之一的儿童进行的 CT 检查没有明确的危险信号。值得注意的是,20%的幼儿迄今为止已接受了超过 1 次头部 CT 扫描,6%的幼儿接受了 6 至 20 次扫描。
本研究样本中需要紧急干预的每个儿童的病史和体检均有危险信号。35%的无危险信号的幼儿的 CT 扫描并未对其急性治疗有帮助。