Department of Neurosurgery, Fujian Children's Hospital (Fujian Branch of Shanghai Children's Medical Center), College of Clinical Medicine for Obstetrics and Gynecology and Pediatrics, Fujian Medical University, Fuzhou, Fujian, People's Republic of China.
Department of Neurosurgery, The 900th Hospital of the Joint Logistic Support Force, Fuzhou, Fujian, People's Republic of China.
Sci Rep. 2024 Mar 7;14(1):5673. doi: 10.1038/s41598-024-56445-z.
Growing skull fracture (GSF) is an uncommon form of head trauma among young children. In prior research, the majority of GSFs were typically classified based on pathophysiological mechanisms or the duration following injury. However, considering the varying severity of initial trauma and the disparities in the time elapsed between injury and hospital admission among patients, our objective was to devise a clinically useful classification system for GSFs among children, grounded in both clinical presentations and imaging findings, in order to guide clinical diagnosis and treatment decisions. The clinical and imaging data of 23 patients less than 12 years who underwent GSF were retrospectively collected and classified into four types. The clinical and imaging characteristics of the different types were reviewed in detail and statistically analyzed. In all 23 patients, 5 in type I, 7 in type II, 8 in type III, and 3 in type IV. 21/23 (91.3%) were younger than 3 years. Age ≤ 3 years and subscalp fluctuating mass were common in type I-III (P = 0.026, P = 0.005). Fracture width ≥ 4 mm was more common in type II-IV (P = 0.003), while neurological dysfunction mostly occurred in type III and IV (P < 0.001).Skull "crater-like" changes were existed in all type IV. 10/12 (83.3%) patients with neurological dysfunction had improved in motor or linguistic function. There was not improved in patients with type IV. GCS in different stage has its unique clinical and imaging characteristics. This classification could help early diagnosis and treatment for GCS, also could improve the prognosis significantly.
颅骨生长性骨折(GSF)是儿童中一种罕见的头部创伤形式。在之前的研究中,大多数 GSF 通常基于病理生理机制或受伤后持续时间进行分类。然而,考虑到初始创伤的严重程度以及患者受伤和入院之间时间间隔的差异,我们的目标是设计一种基于临床表现和影像学发现的儿童 GSF 临床实用分类系统,以指导临床诊断和治疗决策。回顾性收集了 23 名年龄小于 12 岁接受 GSF 治疗的患者的临床和影像学数据,并将其分为四型。详细回顾并统计分析了不同类型的临床和影像学特征。在所有 23 例患者中,Ⅰ型 5 例,Ⅱ型 7 例,Ⅲ型 8 例,Ⅳ型 3 例。21/23(91.3%)例年龄小于 3 岁。Ⅰ-Ⅲ型中年龄≤3 岁和头皮下波动肿块常见(P=0.026,P=0.005)。Ⅱ-Ⅳ型中骨折宽度≥4mm 更常见(P=0.003),而神经功能障碍主要发生在Ⅲ型和Ⅳ型(P<0.001)。所有Ⅳ型均存在颅骨“火山口样”改变。10/12(83.3%)例有神经功能障碍的患者在运动或语言功能方面有改善。Ⅳ型患者无改善。不同阶段的 GCS 具有其独特的临床和影像学特征。这种分类有助于早期诊断和治疗 GCS,也可以显著改善预后。