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Journal Article

Citation

Hon KL, Leung TF, Cheung KL, Nip SY, Ng J, Fok TF, Ng PC. J. Crit. Care 2010; 25(1): 175.e7-1750000012.

Affiliation

Departments of Pediatrics, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Prince of Wales Hospital, Shatin, Hong Kong.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2010, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.jcrc.2009.06.011

PMID

19682841

Abstract

AIM: The aim of this study was to review the patterns of severe childhood injuries and poisoning necessitating pediatric intensive care in a regional trauma center. METHODS: We reviewed discharge data of all children who were hospitalized for severe injuries and poisoning at the pediatric intensive care unit of a teaching hospital between October 2002 and December 2008. RESULTS: There were 86 patients (males/females, 2:1). Road traffic injuries (n = 19), falls (n = 17), and scalds (n = 13) were the 3 leading categories and accounted for 57% of these pediatric intensive care unit admissions. Injuries more commonly occurred indoor (63%), and victims of indoor accidents were younger (median age, 2.6 vs 8.4 years; P < .0001), with scalds, poisoning, and foreign body aspiration being predominant, whereas road traffic accidents predominated in outdoor accidents. As a risk factor, premorbid neurodevelopmental conditions such as mental retardation, convulsion disorder, or cerebral palsy were only present in indoor accidents. Children in outdoor injuries were generally healthy. Both groups were associated with significant morbidity (mechanical ventilation in 60%, inotrope use in 20%, anticonvulsants in 24%, and neurological/neurosurgical supports in 49%). Comparing the 3 most common categories of patients, there were significant differences in the median age, requirement of neurological/neurosurgical supports, and median hospital stay. Although not requiring neurological/neurosurgical supports, scalds injuries involved the youngest age group and required the longest hospital stay. CONCLUSIONS: The causes of severe childhood injuries are heterogeneous. Cardiopulmonary or neurological/neurosurgical supports are often required. These injuries more commonly occur indoor and involve toddlers with underlying neurodevelopmental conditions. These findings have important implications and serve to heighten public awareness especially on home safety measures in the prevention of childhood accidents.


Language: en

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