Rehabilitation Department for Children with Acquired Neurological Injury and Outreach Team for Children and Adolescents with Acquired Brain Injury, Saint Maurice Hospitals, Saint Maurice, France; Laboratoire d'Imagerie Biomédicale, Sorbonne Université, Paris, France; GRC 24, Handicap Moteur et Cognitif et Réadaptation, Sorbonne Université, Paris, France.
GRC 24, Handicap Moteur et Cognitif et Réadaptation, Sorbonne Université, Paris, France; Centre d'Etudes en Santé des Populations, INSERM U1018, Paris, France.
Handb Clin Neurol. 2020;173:451-484. doi: 10.1016/B978-0-444-64150-2.00032-0.
Childhood traumatic brain injury (TBI) commonly occurs during brain development and can have direct, immediately observable neurologic, cognitive, and behavioral consequences. However, it can also disrupt subsequent brain development, and long-term outcomes are a combination of preinjury development and abilities, consequences of brain injury, as well as delayed impaired development of skills that were immature at the time of injury. There is a growing number of studies on mild TBI/sport-related concussions, describing initial symptoms and their evolution over time and providing guidelines for effective management of symptoms and return to activity/school/sports. Mild TBI usually does not lead to long-term cognitive or academic consequences, despite reports of behavioral/psychologic issues postinjury. Regarding moderate to severe TBI, injury to the brain is more severe, with evidence of a number of detrimental consequences in various domains. Patients can display neurologic impairments (e.g., motor deficits, signs of cerebellar disorder, posttraumatic epilepsy), medical problems (e.g., endocrine pituitary deficits, sleep-wake abnormalities), or sensory deficits (e.g., visual, olfactory deficits). The most commonly reported deficits are in the cognitive-behavioral field, which tend to be significantly disabling in the long-term, impacting the development of autonomy, socialization and academic achievement, participation, quality of life, and later, independence and ability to enter the workforce (e.g., intellectual deficits, slow processing speed, attention, memory, executive functions deficits, impulsivity, intolerance to frustration). A number of factors influence outcomes following pediatric TBI, including preinjury stage of development and abilities, brain injury severity, age at injury (with younger age at injury most often associated with worse outcomes), and a number of family/environment factors (e.g., parental education and occupation, family functioning, parenting style, warmth and responsiveness, access to rehabilitation and care). Interventions should identify and target these specific factors, given their major role in postinjury outcomes. Abusive head trauma (AHT) occurs in very young children (most often <6 months) and is a form of severe TBI, usually associated with delay before appropriate care is sought. Outcomes are systematically worse following AHT than following accidental TBI, even when controlling for age at injury and injury severity. Children with moderate to severe TBI and AHT usually require specific, coordinated, multidisciplinary, and long-term rehabilitation interventions and school adaptations, until transition to adult services. Interventions should be patient- and family-centered, focusing on specific goals, comprising education about TBI, and promoting optimal parenting, communication, and collaborative problem-solving.
儿童创伤性脑损伤(TBI)通常发生在大脑发育过程中,可直接导致即刻可观察到的神经、认知和行为后果。然而,它也可能破坏随后的大脑发育,长期后果是受伤前的发育和能力、脑损伤的后果以及受伤时不成熟的技能的延迟受损发展的综合结果。越来越多的研究关注轻度 TBI/与运动相关的脑震荡,描述了初始症状及其随时间的演变,并提供了有效管理症状和恢复活动/学校/运动的指南。尽管有报道称受伤后存在行为/心理问题,但轻度 TBI 通常不会导致长期认知或学业后果。对于中度至重度 TBI,脑损伤更严重,在多个领域都有大量不利后果的证据。患者可能会出现神经功能障碍(例如运动缺陷、小脑障碍迹象、外伤性癫痫)、医疗问题(例如内分泌垂体功能减退、睡眠-觉醒异常)或感觉障碍(例如视觉、嗅觉障碍)。最常报告的缺陷是在认知行为领域,这些缺陷在长期内往往会严重致残,影响自主、社交和学业成绩、参与、生活质量以及后来的独立和进入劳动力市场的能力(例如智力缺陷、处理速度慢、注意力、记忆、执行功能缺陷、冲动、挫折容忍度低)。许多因素会影响儿科 TBI 后的结果,包括受伤前的发育和能力阶段、脑损伤严重程度、受伤年龄(受伤年龄越小,结果通常越差)以及许多家庭/环境因素(例如父母的教育和职业、家庭功能、育儿方式、温暖和响应性、获得康复和护理的机会)。鉴于这些特定因素在受伤后结果中的重要作用,干预措施应确定并针对这些因素。虐待性头部创伤(AHT)发生在非常年幼的儿童(最常见的是<6 个月),是一种严重的 TBI,通常与寻求适当护理的时间延迟有关。与意外 TBI 相比,AHT 后的结果通常更差,即使控制受伤年龄和损伤严重程度也是如此。中重度 TBI 和 AHT 的儿童通常需要特定的、协调的、多学科的和长期的康复干预和学校适应,直到过渡到成人服务。干预措施应以人为本和以家庭为中心,侧重于特定目标,包括关于 TBI 的教育,并促进最佳育儿、沟通和协作解决问题。