Fingarson Amanda, Fortin Kristine
Division of Child Abuse Pediatrics, Department of Pediatrics, Ann and Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois.
Division of General Pediatrics, Department of Pediatrics, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
J Emerg Med. 2019 Aug;57(2):195-202. doi: 10.1016/j.jemermed.2019.03.041. Epub 2019 Jun 3.
Neuroimaging can be an important part of the medical workup for children with suspected physical abuse, but there are not specific guidelines on which children should undergo neuroimaging.
We sought to evaluate the yield of neuroimaging in children <12 months of age who are undergoing physical abuse evaluations and to determine how the yield varied by age, injuries, and social risk factors.
This was a retrospective observational study of infants who presented to an urban children's hospital between September 2007 and October 2012, were evaluated by the hospital's child abuse team, and who received skeletal surveys and underwent neuroimaging for suspected physical abuse. Infants who were diagnosed with head trauma before the abuse evaluation were excluded. Logistic regression was used to investigate the relationship between neuroimaging yield and patient age, presenting injury, and social features.
Head injuries were identified in 14 of 170 infants (8.2%). The yield was similar in children <6 months of age and children ≥6 months of age (7.5% and 9.4%, respectively; p = 0.674). Infants with bruises and cases involving a delay in seeking care or cases with previous Child Protective Services involvement were more likely to have injuries identified on neuroimaging. Infants with current or past neurologic signs/symptoms were also more likely to have head injuries on neuroimaging (5/17, 29%), although most infants with abnormal neuroimaging findings did not have neurologic signs/symptoms (9/14, 64%).
We found that while certain features were associated with abnormal findings on neuroimaging, infant age (<6 months vs. 6-12 months) was not.
神经影像学检查可以成为疑似身体虐待儿童医学检查的重要组成部分,但对于哪些儿童应接受神经影像学检查尚无具体指南。
我们试图评估接受身体虐待评估的12个月以下儿童神经影像学检查的阳性率,并确定阳性率如何随年龄、损伤情况及社会风险因素而变化。
这是一项对2007年9月至2012年10月间到一家城市儿童医院就诊、由医院儿童虐待问题小组进行评估、接受骨骼检查并因疑似身体虐待接受神经影像学检查的婴儿进行的回顾性观察研究。在虐待评估前被诊断为头部创伤的婴儿被排除。采用逻辑回归分析来研究神经影像学检查阳性率与患者年龄、所呈现的损伤情况及社会特征之间的关系。
170名婴儿中有14名(8.2%)被发现有头部损伤。6个月以下儿童和6个月及以上儿童的阳性率相似(分别为7.5%和9.4%;p = 0.674)。有瘀伤的婴儿、涉及延迟就诊的病例或曾有儿童保护服务机构介入的病例,在神经影像学检查中更有可能发现损伤。目前或过去有神经体征/症状的婴儿在神经影像学检查中也更有可能出现头部损伤(5/17,29%),尽管大多数神经影像学检查结果异常的婴儿没有神经体征/症状(9/14,64%)。
我们发现,虽然某些特征与神经影像学检查的异常结果相关,但婴儿年龄(<6个月与6 - 12个月)并非如此。