Management of the paediatric patient with acute head trauma Flashcards
What is the incidence of head trauma leading to brain injury in children in Canada?
130-200 cases per 100 000
What is TBI?
This term is used to describe the symptoms and signs that result from trauma to the brain itself, which may or may not be associated with findings of injury on imaging studies.
Why are children at higher risk of developing an intracranial lesion due to head trauma?
- Larger head-to-body size ratio
- Thinner cranial bone
- Less myelinated neural tissue
What are the most common causes of head trauma in children and youth presenting to Canadian ED?
- Falls
- Sports-related injuries
- Being hit on the head, by an object or by colliding with an obstacle
- Injuries involving the use of a bicycle
- Injuries involving motor vehicles, especially as a pedestrian.
What are the most common causes of intracranial injury?
- falls from a height above three feet (91 cm, or twice the length/height of the individual)
- involvement in a motor vehicle accident (either as a passenger or a pedestrian)
- impact from a high-velocity projectile
What are some signs of head trauma?
- Headache
- Amnesia
- Impaired level of consciousness, disorientation or confusion
- Vomiting
- Loss of consciousness
- Blurred vision
- Seizures
- Lethargy
- Irritability
What signs are particularly associated with intracranial injury?
- Prolonged loss of consciousness or impaired level of consciousness
- Disorientation or confusion; amnesia
- Worsening headache
- Repeated or persistent vomiting
What is the classification of the severity of head trauma?
- GCS 14 to 15: Minor head trauma
- GCS 9 to 13: Moderate head trauma
- GCS ≤8: Severe head trauma
What is the GCS?
Eye Opening: 4 Spontaneous 3 To verbal stimuli 2 To pain 1 None
Best Verbal Response: 5 Oriented 4 Confused 3 Inappropriate words 2 Incomprehensible sounds 1 None
Best Motor Response 6 Follows commands 5 Localized pain 4 Withdraws to pain 3 Flexion to pain 2 Extension to pain 1 None
What is the pediatric GCS?
Eye Opening: 4 Spontaneous 3 To verbal stimuli 2 To pain 1 None
Best Verbal Response: 5 Coos, babbles 4 Irritable, cries 3 Cries to pain 2 Moans to pain 1 None
Best Motor Response 6 Normal spontaneous movement 5 Withdraws to touch 4 Withdraws to pain 3 Abnormal Flexion 2 Abnormal Extension 1 None
What is the first management priority?
Stabilize vital signs
What should be avoided to prevent secondary injury to the brain?
- Hypoxia
- Hypotension
- Hyperthermia
- Raised ICP
What should be considered?
Possibility of abusive head trauma
What elements should be included in a pertinent history?
- The mechanism of head trauma, whether witnessed or not;
- The state in which the patient was found, including loss of consciousness or seizures;
- Presenting symptoms, especially impaired level of consciousness, disorientation or confusion, amnesia, worsening headache or repeated vomiting; and
- Medical history of head injury, neurological disorders, medication use and bleeding diathesis.
What is the initial assessment and stabilization of the airway?
Consider possible injury to the cervical spine
Maintain head and neck in a neutral position
Immobilization: Sandbags, intravenous solution bags, towel rolls (younger patients)
Age-appropriate rigid cervical collar or manual in-line immobilization (older patients)
Orotracheal intubation if cannot maintain airway adequately with positioning and after suctioning