Head Injury Update 2018

CME CREDIT NOW AVAILABLE-1.0 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit FOR EACH ISSUE (2 ARTICLES)!!!!!!

By Micheal Greenwald

mgreenw@emory.edu

Research continues on a number of fronts regarding head injury evaluation and management.  Below are highlights from 2 of these articles and a summary of a recently published set of guidelines from the CDC.  The articles were exceptionally large studies that pertain to important factors in deciding when to use CT in evaluation of head injury in children. The CDC guidelines explain levels of evidence for a variety of issues regarding diagnosis, prognosis management and treatment of concussion.

Vomiting as a predictor of intracranial injury1

This large sampling (19, 920) of pediatric head injury patients in Australia and New Zealand (2011-14) looked at association of clinically important TBI (ciTBI) and vomiting.  This study supports previous research showing that vomiting is common following head injury, especially under 2 years of age; however, vomiting is rarely an independent predictor of ciTBI.

Patients with skull fractures, altered mental status, and headaches more likely to have ciTBI with vomiting (OR 80.1; 95% CI 43.4–148.0; OR 2.4; 95% CI 1.0–5.5; and OR 2.3; 95% CI 1.3–4.1, respectively).

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Fever and Limp-Review of Children’s Musculoskeletal Guidelines

CME CREDIT NOW AVAILABLE-1.0 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit FOR EACH ISSUE (2 ARTICLES)!!!!!!

BY Mike Mallory

michael.mallory@pemaweb.com

 

A 3-year-old comes to your office with a fever and a limp.  Parents noticed a little discomfort yesterday, but it’s worse today and now the child doesn’t want to bear weight.  What is the work up that we need to do?  That is the question that the recently finalized Musculoskeletal (MSK) Infection clinical practice guideline attempts to answer.

The first question that the guideline asks us is to determine our level of suspicion for risk of MSK infection.  The following historical and exam features should raise suspicion of MSK infection.

History:

Pain, fever, inability to bear weight, gait disturbance/limp, limited use of extremity, immobility of extremity, travel to area with endemic Lyme disease.

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