Chotai Pranit N, Manning Lisa, Eithun Benjamin, Ross Joshua C, Eubanks James W, Hamner Chad, Gosain Ankush
Division of Pediatric Surgery, Department of Surgery, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, Tennessee.
Pediatric Trauma Program, American Family Children's Hospital, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin.
J Surg Res. 2017 May 15;212:108-113. doi: 10.1016/j.jss.2017.01.024. Epub 2017 Jan 29.
The purpose of this study was to determine the incidence of traumatic injuries, factors associated with mortality, and need for pediatric trauma surgery involvement for drowning and near-drowning events in children.
An institutional review board-approved, retrospective chart review was performed at three American College of Surgeons-verified Pediatric Trauma Centers (2011-2014). Patients with International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, codes or E-codes for fatal-nonfatal drowning, fall into water, accidental drowning, or submersion were included. Bivariate analysis using chi-square or Fisher exact test for nominal variables and Mann-Whitney U test for continuous variables was performed.
A total of 363 patients (median 3.17 y [18 d-17 y]) met the inclusion criteria. Drowning sites included pool (81.5%), bathtub (12.9%), and natural water (5.2%). A witnessed fall or dive was reported in 34.9%, 57.9% did not fall or dive, and 7% had an unwitnessed event. Most patients did not undergo cervical spine (83%) or brain imaging (75.5%). Seven patients (1.92%) had associated soft tissue injuries. Two patients (0.006%) received surgical intervention (bronchoscopy and extracorporeal membrane oxygenation) within 24 h of presentation. Only 2.2% were admitted to the pediatric trauma service. The percentage of patients discharged home from the emergency department was 10.2%. Overall mortality was 12.4%. Factors associated with mortality included transfer from outside hospital (P = 0.016), presence of hypothermia on arrival (P < 0.0001), Glasgow Coma Scale of 3 on arrival (P < 0.0001), drowning in a pool (P = 0.013), or undergoing brain cooling at admission (P = 0.011).
This is the largest reported series of pediatric near-drowning events. Only rarely did patients require immediate surgical attention and the majority were admitted to nonsurgical services. These data suggest that routine pediatric trauma surgery service involvement in patients with near-drowning events may be unnecessary.
本研究旨在确定儿童溺水和近乎溺水事件中创伤性损伤的发生率、与死亡率相关的因素以及小儿创伤外科介入的必要性。
在美国外科学院认证的三家小儿创伤中心(2011 - 2014年)进行了一项经机构审查委员会批准的回顾性病历审查。纳入具有国际疾病分类第九版编码或E编码的致命 - 非致命溺水、落水、意外溺水或浸没患者。对名义变量使用卡方检验或Fisher精确检验,对连续变量使用Mann - Whitney U检验进行双变量分析。
共有363例患者(中位数3.17岁[18天 - 17岁])符合纳入标准。溺水地点包括游泳池(81.5%)、浴缸(12.9%)和天然水域(5.2%)。34.9%的患者有目睹的跌倒或跳水情况,57.9%没有跌倒或跳水,7%为未目睹事件。大多数患者未进行颈椎(83%)或脑部成像(75.5%)。7例患者(1.92%)伴有软组织损伤。2例患者(0.006%)在就诊后24小时内接受了手术干预(支气管镜检查和体外膜肺氧合)。仅2.2%的患者被收入小儿创伤科。从急诊科出院回家的患者比例为10.2%。总体死亡率为12.4%。与死亡率相关的因素包括从外院转运(P = 0.016)、入院时体温过低(P < 0.0001)、入院时格拉斯哥昏迷量表评分为3分(P < 0.0001)、在游泳池溺水(P = 0.013)或入院时接受脑部降温(P = 0.011)。
这是所报道的最大系列小儿近乎溺水事件。患者很少需要立即进行手术治疗,大多数患者被收入非外科科室。这些数据表明,常规让小儿创伤外科参与近乎溺水事件患者的治疗可能没有必要。