TY - JOUR PY - 2024// TI - The epidemiological characteristics of pediatric head injury in Hangzhou, China: a retrospective study based on cranial CT examinations JO - Brain injury A1 - Li, Haomin A1 - Ding, Yushuang A1 - Zhou, Haichun A1 - Hu, Lei A1 - Feng, Yuqing A1 - Shen, Zhipeng A1 - Zhang, Hongxi A1 - Shu, Liqi A1 - Tan, Linhua SP - ePub EP - ePub VL - ePub IS - ePub N2 - PRIMARY OBJECTIVE: This study aims to create a pediatric head injury database based on cranial CT examinations and explore their epidemiologic characteristics.

METHODS: Data related to cranial CT examinations of pediatric head injuries from March 2014 to March 2021 were collected at outpatient and emergency department of a pediatric medical center. The causes of injury, observable post-injury symptoms, and cranial injury findings were extracted with the assistance of natural language processing techniques.

RESULTS: Reviewing the data from records on 52,821 children with head injuries over a period of 7 years, the most common causes of pediatric head injury were falls (58.3%), traffic accidents (26.0%), smash/crush/strike (13.9%), violence (1.5%) and sports-related incidents (0.3%). Overall, most of those injured were boys which accounting for 62.2% of all cases. Skull fractures most commonly occur in the parietal bone (9.0%), followed by the occipital (5.2%), frontal (3.3%) and temporal bones (3.0%). Most intracranial hemorrhages occurred in epidural (5.8%), followed by subdural (5.1%), subarachnoid (0.9%), intraparenchymal (0.5%) and intraventricular (0.2%) hemorrhages. Spring and autumn showed more events than any other season.

CONCLUSIONS: To the best of our knowledge, this is the largest sample of epidemiological study of head injury in the Chinese pediatric population to date.

Language: en

LA - en SN - 0269-9052 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02699052.2024.2309545 ID - ref1 ER -