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Journal Article

Citation

Wright JN, Feyma TJ, Ishak GE, Abeshaus S, Metz JB, Brown ECB, Friedman SD, Browd SR, Feldman KW. Pediatr. Radiol. 2019; 49(13): 1762-1772.

Affiliation

Department of Pediatrics, Children's Protection Program, M/S SB-250, Seattle Children's Hospital, Harborview Medical Center, 4800 Sand Point Way NE, Seattle, WA, 98105, USA. kfeldman@uw.edu.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1007/s00247-019-04483-5

PMID

31745619

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Limited documentation exists about how frequently radiologically visible rebleeding occurs with abusive subdural hemorrhages (SDH). Likewise, little is known about rebleeding predispositions and associated symptoms.

OBJECTIVE: To describe the frequency of subdural rebleeding after abusive head trauma (AHT), its predispositions and clinical presentation.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: We evaluated children with SDHs from AHT who were reimaged within a year of their initial hospitalization, retrospectively reviewing clinical details and imaging. We used the available CT and MR images. We then performed simple descriptive and comparative statistics.

RESULTS: Fifty-four of 85 reimaged children (63.5%) with AHT-SDH rebled. No child had new trauma, radiologic evidence of new parenchymal injury or acute neurologic symptoms from rebleeding. From the initial presentation, macrocephaly was associated with subsequent rebleeding. Greater subdural depth, macrocephaly, ventriculomegaly and brain atrophy at follow-up were associated with rebleeding. No other radiologic findings at initial presentation or follow-up predicted rebleeding risk, although pre-existing brain atrophy at initial admission and initial chronic SDHs barely missed significance. Impact injuries, retinal hemorrhages and clinical indices of initial injury severity were not associated with rebleeding. All rebleeding occurred within chronic SDHs; no new bridging vein rupture was identified. The mean time until rebleeding was recognized was 12 weeks; no child had rebleeding after 49 weeks.

CONCLUSION: Subdural rebleeding is common and occurs in children who have brain atrophy, ventriculomegaly, macrocephaly and deep SDHs at rebleed. It usually occurs in the early months post-injury. All children with rebleeds were neurologically asymptomatic and lacked histories or clinical or radiologic findings of new trauma. Bleeds did not occur outside of chronic SDHs. We estimate the maximum predicted frequency of non-traumatic SDH rebleeding accompanied by acute neurological symptoms in children with a prior abusive SDH is 3.5%.


Language: en

Keywords

Abusive head trauma; Child abuse; Computed tomography; Infants; Magnetic resonance imaging; Subdural hemorrhage; Subdural rebleeding

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