Thoracolumbar spine subdural hematoma as a result of nonaccidental trauma in a 4-month-old infant.

J Neurosurg Pediatr

Department of Neurosurgery, Women and Children's Hospital of Buffalo, Kaleida Health, School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, University at Buffalo, State University of New York, Buffalo, New York 14222, USA.

Published: August 2008

The authors describe the previously unreported occurrence of thoracolumbar subdural hematoma (SDH) resulting from nonaccidental trauma and emphasize the need for a complete and thorough neurological, physical, and radiological examination in all cases of suspected nonaccidental trauma. A 4-month-old male infant presented to the authors' Level 1 pediatric trauma center in respiratory arrest. According to the family, he had been previously healthy with a 1-day history of fussiness and irritability. While with one of the parents, the patient was noted to be apneic and had been shaken in 2 separate episodes in an attempt to stimulate respiration. Emergency services personnel intubated the child's trachea and transported him to the hospital. On arrival in the emergency department, the child was unresponsive and exhibited signs of myelopathy. A CT scan of his head demonstrated SDH and subarachnoid hemorrhage. Magnetic resonance imaging of the spine demonstrated an SDH dorsal to the spinal cord with some mass effect on the conus medullaris and descending nerve roots. The patient underwent emergency T-12 to L-3 laminotomies, evacuation of the hematoma, and laminoplasty. The rigid nature of the rib cage provides a point of fixation around which the thoracolumbar spine can hyperflex and hyperextend when shaken, resulting in severe injury to the bony, vascular, and neural elements of the spine.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3171/PED/2008/2/8/139DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

nonaccidental trauma
12
thoracolumbar spine
8
subdural hematoma
8
trauma 4-month-old
8
demonstrated sdh
8
spine subdural
4
hematoma result
4
result nonaccidental
4
trauma
4
4-month-old infant
4

Similar Publications

Purpose: To evaluate whether adult and pediatric trauma center status, as well as the presence of dedicated child protection teams, influences radiology resident performance in detecting non-accidental trauma on the Emergent/Critical Care Imaging Simulation (WIDI SIM) exam.

Materials And Methods: We retrospectively analyzed 639 WIDI SIM exam scores for four pediatric non-accidental trauma cases completed by radiology residents across 33 programs. Residents were stratified by level (R1-R4) and institutional factors, including adult trauma center status, pediatric trauma center status, and child protection team presence.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Identifying non-accidental trauma (NAT) in pediatric trauma patients is challenging. We developed a machine learning model that uses demographic characteristics and ICD10 codes to detect the first diagnosis of NAT.

Methods: We analyzed data from the Maryland Health Services Cost Review Commission (2015-2020) for patients aged 0-19 years.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Based on the presenting injury, patients undergoing abuse evaluation may be managed by different specialties. Our local child abuse specialist expressed concern over the variability in evaluation of patients presenting with injuries concerning for non-accidental trauma (NAT). The aim of this quality improvement project was to increase the percentage of patients for whom there is a concern for NAT who receive a guideline-adherent evaluation from 7.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The mechanism-specific injury mortality burden associated with heatwave in China in a warming world.

Environ Int

January 2025

Department of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, School of Medicine, Jinan University, Guangzhou 510632, China; Key Laboratory of Viral Pathogenesis & Infection Prevention and Control (Jinan University), Ministry of Education, Guangzhou 510632, China. Electronic address:

Numerous studies have investigated the impact of heatwaves on non-accidental mortality, yet the association and burden of heatwaves on mechanism-specific injury mortality remain underexplored. This study collected 257,267 injury-related fatalities and corresponding daily maximum temperatures (DMT) across seven Chinese provinces from 2013 to 2023. A heatwave was characterized by two or more successive days where the DMT surpassed its 92.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to evaluate the pediatric Brain Injury Guidelines (pBIG) for identifying pediatric patients with traumatic intracranial hemorrhage (ICH) who may not need further neuroimaging or hospitalization.
  • A total of 955 patients were analyzed, with findings showing that the majority had pBIG 2 or 3 injuries, and nearly 40% of those who had repeat imaging showed hemorrhage progression.
  • Those meeting pBIG 3 criteria were significantly more likely to need surgical intervention or face higher mortality rates, emphasizing the importance of the guidelines in determining treatment urgency.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!