Literature DB >> 12581336

Dural haemorrhage in non-traumatic infant deaths: does it explain the bleeding in 'shaken baby syndrome'?

J F Geddes1, R C Tasker, A K Hackshaw, C D Nickols, G G W Adams, H L Whitwell, I Scheimberg.   

Abstract

A histological review of dura mater taken from a post-mortem series of 50 paediatric cases aged up to 5 months revealed fresh bleeding in the dura in 36/50, the bleeding ranging from small perivascular haemorrhages to extensive haemorrhage which had ruptured onto the surface of the dura. Severe hypoxia had been documented clinically in 27 of the 36 cases (75%). In a similar review of three infants presenting with classical 'shaken baby syndrome', intradural haemorrhage was also found, in addition to subdural bleeding, and we believe that our findings may have relevance to the pathogenesis of some infantile subdural haemorrhage. Recent work has shown that, in a proportion of infants with fatal head injury, there is little traumatic brain damage and that the significant finding is craniocervical injury, which causes respiratory abnormalities, severe global hypoxia and brain swelling, with raised intracranial pressure. We propose that, in such infants, a combination of severe hypoxia, brain swelling and raised central venous pressure causes blood to leak from intracranial veins into the subdural space, and that the cause of the subdural bleeding in some cases of infant head injury is therefore not traumatic rupture of bridging veins, but a phenomenon of immaturity. Hypoxia with brain swelling would also account for retinal haemorrhages, and so provide a unified hypothesis for the clinical and neuropathological findings in cases of infant head injury, without impact or considerable force being necessary.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12581336     DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2990.2003.00434.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuropathol Appl Neurobiol        ISSN: 0305-1846            Impact factor:   8.090


  48 in total

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Authors:  James LeFanu; Rioch Edwards-Brown
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2.  Shaken baby syndrome.

Authors:  Brian Harding; R Anthony Risdon; Henry F Krous
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3.  Is there a causal relationship between the hypoxia-ischaemia associated with cardiorespiratory arrest and subdural haematomas? An observational study.

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4.  Diagnosis of "shaken baby syndrome" still valid, appeal court rules.

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5.  After the Court of Appeal: R v Harris and others [2005] EWCA crim 1980.

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Review 6.  Shaken baby syndrome.

Authors:  P G Richards; G E Bertocci; R E Bonshek; P L Giangrande; R M Gregson; T Jaspan; C Jenny; N Klein; W Lawler; M Peters; L B Rorke-Adams; H Vyas; A Wade
Journal:  Arch Dis Child       Date:  2006-03       Impact factor: 3.791

7.  Nonaccidental trauma: clinical aspects and epidemiology of child abuse.

Authors:  Waney Squier
Journal:  Pediatr Radiol       Date:  2009-04-28

8.  Nonaccidental trauma: clinical aspects and epidemiology of child abuse.

Authors:  Jennian F Geddes
Journal:  Pediatr Radiol       Date:  2009-04-28

9.  Thin-films of subdural hemorrhage in the absence of mechanical trauma: the new challenge of an expanding differential.

Authors:  John G Galaznik
Journal:  Pediatr Radiol       Date:  2009-05-05

10.  The pathophysiology does not denote the mechanism.

Authors:  Thomas L Slovis; Stephen Chapman
Journal:  Pediatr Radiol       Date:  2009-01-23
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