Warren Alpert School of Medicine, Brown University, Providence, RI 02903, United States of America; Department of Neurosurgery, Warren Alpert School of Medicine, Brown University, Providence, RI 02903, United States of America.
Warren Alpert School of Medicine, Brown University, Providence, RI 02903, United States of America.
Am J Emerg Med. 2023 May;67:56-62. doi: 10.1016/j.ajem.2023.02.007. Epub 2023 Feb 10.
The use of all-terrain vehicles (ATVs) carries significant risk of permanent injury and death, disproportionately affecting children. These injuries commonly affect the head and are especially severe among children as they are often unhelmeted and more likely than adults to experience rollover injuries. Many studies examining patients with ATV-related injuries are single-center cohort studies, with few focusing specifically on head injuries. In the present study, we aimed to characterize the annual incidence of ATV-related head injuries between 2012 and 2021, classify and compare head injury types, and identify descriptive characteristics of ATV-related head injury victims.
Using the US Consumer Product Safety Commission's National Electronic Injury Surveillance System (NEISS) database, we queried all head injuries associated with operating or riding an ATV in children under 18 years-old from over 100 emergency departments (EDs). Patient information regarding age, race, sex, location of incident, diagnoses, and sequelae were analyzed. We also collected the estimated number of ATV-related head injuries from all US EDs using the NEISS algorithm provided by the database.
Using the NEISS algorithm we identified 67,957 (95% CI: 43,608 - 92,305) total pediatric ATV-related head injuries between 2012 and 2021. The annual incidence of ATV-related head injury was similar throughout this study period except for a 20% increase during the COVID-19 pandemic period of 2019-2021 (2019: 6382 injuries, 2020: 6757 injuries, 2021: 7600 injuries). A subset of 1890 cases from approximately 100 EDs were then analyzed. Unspecified closed head injuries were the prevailing type of injury (38%, 900/1890), followed by concussions (27%, 510/1890). More severe injuries included intracranial hemorrhages in 91 children (3.8%, 91/1890). Injuries of all types were predominantly seen in 14-17 year-old's (780/1890, 41%) and in males (64.1%, 1211/1890). In addition, ATV-associated injuries were significantly more common in those coded as white (58.0%, 1096/1890) than any other racial group. ATV-associated accidents among children younger than 9 more commonly occurred at the home compared to accidents involving children older than 9 (57% vs. 32%, p < 0.0001).
ATV-related head injuries cause a significant annual burden among children, with growing incidence in recent years. Further research may wish to explore potential benefits of helmet use and supervision of younger children in possible prevention of these accidents and their associated economic and non-economic costs.
全地形车(ATV)的使用存在永久性伤害和死亡的重大风险,儿童受影响尤为严重。这些伤害通常涉及头部,在儿童中尤为严重,因为他们通常不戴头盔,而且比成年人更容易发生翻车事故。许多研究 ATV 相关伤害的患者都是单中心队列研究,很少有专门研究头部损伤的。本研究旨在描述 2012 年至 2021 年期间与 ATV 相关的头部损伤的年发生率,分类和比较头部损伤类型,并确定与 ATV 相关的头部损伤患者的描述性特征。
使用美国消费者产品安全委员会的国家电子伤害监测系统(NEISS)数据库,我们从 100 多个急诊室(ED)中查询了所有与 18 岁以下儿童操作或骑 ATV 相关的头部受伤病例。分析了患者的年龄、种族、性别、事故地点、诊断和后遗症等信息。我们还使用数据库提供的 NEISS 算法收集了全美所有 ED 中与 ATV 相关的头部损伤的估计数量。
使用 NEISS 算法,我们确定了 2012 年至 2021 年期间,67957 例(95%置信区间:43608-92305)与儿科 ATV 相关的头部损伤。除了 2019-2021 年 COVID-19 大流行期间增加 20%(2019 年:6382 例,2020 年:6757 例,2021 年:7600 例)外,整个研究期间 ATV 相关头部损伤的年发生率相似。然后分析了来自大约 100 个 ED 的 1890 例病例的一个子集。未特指的闭合性头部损伤是最常见的损伤类型(38%,900/1890),其次是脑震荡(27%,510/1890)。更严重的损伤包括 91 名儿童的颅内出血(3.8%,91/1890)。所有类型的损伤主要发生在 14-17 岁(780/1890,41%)和男性(64.1%,1211/1890)。此外,与 ATV 相关的损伤在编码为白人的患者中明显更为常见(58.0%,1096/1890),而不是任何其他种族群体。9 岁以下儿童的 ATV 相关事故更常见于家中,而 9 岁以上儿童的 ATV 相关事故更常见于家中(57% vs. 32%,p<0.0001)。
ATV 相关头部损伤对儿童造成了重大的年度负担,近年来发病率呈上升趋势。进一步的研究可能希望探讨头盔使用和对年幼儿童的监督的潜在益处,以可能预防这些事故及其相关的经济和非经济成本。