Division of Emergency Medicine, Department of Women's and Children's Health, University of Padova, Padova, Italy.
Division of Emergency Medicine, Department of Women's and Children's Health, University of Padova, Padova, Italy.
Ann Emerg Med. 2018 Jun;71(6):714-724.e2. doi: 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2017.10.014. Epub 2017 Nov 24.
Most studies of children with isolated skull fractures have been relatively small, and rare adverse outcomes may have been missed. Our aim is to quantify the frequency of short-term adverse outcomes of children with isolated skull fractures.
PubMed, EMBASE, the Cochrane Library, Scopus, Web of Science, and gray literature were systematically searched to identify studies reporting on short-term adverse outcomes of children aged 18 years or younger with linear, nondisplaced, isolated skull fractures (ie, without traumatic intracranial injury on neuroimaging). Two investigators independently reviewed identified articles for inclusion, assessed quality, and extracted relevant data. Our primary outcome was emergency neurosurgery or death. Secondary outcomes were hospitalization and new intracranial hemorrhage on repeated neuroimaging. Meta-analyses of pooled estimate of each outcome were conducted with random-effects models, and heterogeneity across studies was assessed.
Of the 587 studies screened, the 21 that met our inclusion criteria included 6,646 children with isolated skull fractures. One child needed emergency neurosurgery and no children died (pooled estimate 0.0%; 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.0% to 0.0%; I=0%). Of the 6,280 children with known emergency department disposition, 4,914 (83%; 95% CI 71% to 92%; I=99%) were hospitalized. Of the 569 children who underwent repeated neuroimaging, 6 had new evidence of intracranial hemorrhage (0.0%; 95% CI 0.0% to 9.0%; I=77%); none required operative intervention.
Children with isolated skull fractures were at extremely low risk for emergency neurosurgery or death, but were frequently hospitalized. Clinically stable children with an isolated skull fracture may be considered for outpatient management in the absence of other clinical concerns.
大多数孤立性颅骨骨折患儿的研究规模相对较小,可能遗漏了罕见的不良结局。我们的目的是量化儿童孤立性颅骨骨折的短期不良结局的频率。
系统检索了 PubMed、EMBASE、Cochrane 图书馆、Scopus、Web of Science 和灰色文献,以确定报告年龄在 18 岁或以下、线性、无移位、孤立性颅骨骨折(即神经影像学无创伤性颅内损伤)儿童短期不良结局的研究。两名研究人员独立审查纳入的文章,评估质量并提取相关数据。我们的主要结局是紧急神经外科手术或死亡。次要结局是重复神经影像学检查时的住院和新颅内出血。采用随机效应模型对每个结局的汇总估计值进行荟萃分析,并评估研究间的异质性。
在筛选出的 587 篇研究中,符合纳入标准的 21 项研究纳入了 6646 例孤立性颅骨骨折患儿。1 例患儿需要紧急神经外科手术,无患儿死亡(汇总估计值 0.0%;95%置信区间 [CI] 0.0%至 0.0%;I=0%)。在已知急诊科处置情况的 6280 例患儿中,4914 例(83%;95%CI 71%至 92%;I=99%)住院。在 569 例接受重复神经影像学检查的患儿中,6 例有新的颅内出血证据(0.0%;95%CI 0.0%至 9.0%;I=77%),但无需手术干预。
孤立性颅骨骨折患儿发生紧急神经外科手术或死亡的风险极低,但经常住院。在没有其他临床问题的情况下,对于临床稳定的孤立性颅骨骨折患儿,可以考虑门诊治疗。