Literature DB >> 19946689

Natural history of traumatic meningeal bleeding in infants: semiquantitative analysis of serial CT scans in corroborated cases.

Matthieu Vinchon1, Marie Desurmont, Gustavo Soto-Ares, Sabine De Foort-Dhellemmes.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The natural history of posttraumatic meningeal bleeding in infants is poorly documented, and the differences between inflicted head injury (IHI) and accidental trauma (AT) are debated. Autopsy findings have suggested that anoxia also plays a role in bleeding; however, these findings may not reflect what occurs in live trauma patients.
PURPOSE: We studied the natural history of traumatic meningeal bleeding in infants using serial computed tomography (CT) scans in corroborated IHI and AT.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: From our prospective series, we selected corroborated cases (confessed IHI or AT having occurred in public), who underwent at least three CT scans in the acute phase. We performed a semiquantitative analysis of meningeal bleeding using a four-tier scale (absent, faint, frank, and thick) derived from the Fisher grading for aneurysmal bleeding in four regions of interest (convexity, falx cerebri, sagittal sinus, and tentorium cerebelli).
RESULTS: We studied 20 cases: ten IHI and ten AT. Bleeding was maximal at the convexity initially, then increased along the falx and sagittal sinus, and then along the tentorium. Decrease and disappearance of blood was variable according to the site and the initial quantity of blood. We found no difference between IHI and AT.
CONCLUSION: Our findings suggest that the primary site of meningeal bleeding in infantile head trauma is the convexity of the brain; blood cells then migrate toward the midline following the flow of cerebrospinal fluid circulation and inferiorly following gravity. The pattern of bleeding in traumatic cases appears similar in IHI and AT but different from anoxic lesions.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19946689     DOI: 10.1007/s00381-009-1047-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Childs Nerv Syst        ISSN: 0256-7040            Impact factor:   1.475


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