Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC, USA.
Department of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC, USA.
Am J Surg. 2019 Jul;218(1):100-105. doi: 10.1016/j.amjsurg.2018.10.006. Epub 2018 Oct 15.
Blunt cerebrovascular injury (BCVI) is a rare consequence of blunt trauma. There appears to be benefit to an aggressive approach to screening for BCVI due to catastrophic sequelae of unrecognized injury. However, screening for BCVI carries extensive cost and oncologic risk to young patients. Foundational BCVI studies examined adults primarily, leaving question to the effectiveness of these criteria in children. We sought to evaluate BCVI screening criteria developed in primarily adult populations using a nationally representative pediatric dataset.
We queried the 2008-2014 National Trauma Data Bank for patients with BCVI. Patients were stratified by age (adults>18yrs, pediatric≤18yrs). Screening factors from the Modified Denver Criteria and Modified Memphis Criteria (GCS≤8, C1C3 cervical fracture, cervical subluxation, seatbelt sign, basilar skull fracture, mid-facial fracture, mandibular fracture, significant blood loss, coma, stroke, and hanging) were examined using univariate analysis and backwards-stepwise logistic regression to verify predictors of BCVI.
Blunt injury occurred in 2,174,244 adults and 422,181 children; 5970 adults and 809 children sustained BCVI. In univariate analysis, all screening factors correlated with BCVI in both groups (p < 0.001). When comparing BCVI patients, children more commonly experienced GCS≤8, seatbelt sign, basilar skull fracture, mid-facial fracture, mandibular fracture, and coma (p < 0.05). In multivariable analysis, seatbelt sign was not associated with pediatric BCVI.
Many adult-associated BCVI risk factors apply to children. Although children more commonly experience seatbelt sign, it does not independently cause increased BCVI risk. Given the rarity of pediatric BCVI, prospective multi-institutional studies are warranted to establish screening criteria specific to children.
钝性脑血管损伤(BCVI)是钝性创伤的罕见后果。由于未识别损伤的灾难性后果,似乎有必要积极筛查 BCVI。然而,对年轻患者进行 BCVI 筛查会带来广泛的成本和肿瘤风险。基础性 BCVI 研究主要检查成年人,这使得这些标准在儿童中的有效性存在疑问。我们试图使用全国代表性的儿科数据集评估主要针对成年人的 BCVI 筛查标准。
我们在 2008-2014 年国家创伤数据库中查询了患有 BCVI 的患者。患者按年龄(成人>18 岁,儿科≤18 岁)分层。使用单变量分析和向后逐步逻辑回归检查修改后的丹佛标准和修改后的孟菲斯标准(GCS≤8、C1C3 颈椎骨折、颈椎半脱位、安全带征、颅底骨折、中面部骨折、下颌骨骨折、大量失血、昏迷、中风和上吊)中的筛选因素,以验证 BCVI 的预测因子。
钝性损伤发生在 2174244 名成年人和 422181 名儿童中;5970 名成年人和 809 名儿童发生 BCVI。在单变量分析中,两组中所有筛选因素均与 BCVI 相关(p<0.001)。在比较 BCVI 患者时,儿童更常出现 GCS≤8、安全带征、颅底骨折、中面部骨折、下颌骨骨折和昏迷(p<0.05)。多变量分析中,安全带征与儿科 BCVI 无关。
许多与成人相关的 BCVI 危险因素也适用于儿童。尽管儿童更常出现安全带征,但它不会独立增加 BCVI 的风险。鉴于儿科 BCVI 的罕见性,需要进行前瞻性多机构研究,以制定针对儿童的具体筛查标准。