| Literature DB >> 22894549 |
Pertti K Suominen1, Raisa Vähätalo.
Abstract
Drowning is a major source of mortality and morbidity in children worldwide. Neurocognitive outcome of children after drowning incidents cannot be accurately predicted in the early course of treatment. Therefore, aggressive out-of-hospital and in-hospital treatment is emphasized. There are "miracle" cases after long submersion times that have been reported in the medical literature, which mostly concern small children. However, many of the survivors will remain severely neurologically compromised after remarkably shorter submersion times and will consequently be a great burden to their family and society for the rest of their lives. The duration of submersion, the need of advanced life support at the site of the accident, the duration of cardiopulmonary resuscitation, whether spontaneous breathing and circulation are present on arrival at the emergency room are important factors related to survival with mild neurological deficits or intact function in drowned children. Data on long-term outcome are scarce. The used outcome measurement methods and the duration of follow-up have not been optimal in most of the existing studies. Proper neurological and neurophysiological examinations for drowned children are superior to outcome scales based chart reviews. There is evidence that gross neurological examination at the time of discharge from the hospital in young children does not reveal all the possible sequelae related to hypoxic brain injury and thus long-term follow-up of drowned resuscitated children is strongly recommended.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22894549 PMCID: PMC3493332 DOI: 10.1186/1757-7241-20-55
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Scand J Trauma Resusc Emerg Med ISSN: 1757-7241 Impact factor: 2.953
Studies on long term survival in children after drowning accident
| Prospective 1971-75 | 54 | Not reported | Freshwater immersion accidents in which consciousness was lost | Median 23 months (3–60 months) | Neurological and neuropsychological testing | 95% of children survived neurologically normal | |
| Prospective 1971-76 | 30 | Median 4 years | Drowned children of whom 28/30 had been resuscitated | Median 22 months (6–58 months) | Neurological and neuropsychological testing of 17 survivors | 13 children with slight neurological deficit and 4 with severe deficit | |
| Prospective 1979-83 | 49 | 8-154 months | Drowned children who had been resuscitated by EMS personnel | 8-40 months | Neurological and neuropsychological testing of 7 apparently intact survivors | Long-term survivors had nearly normal levels of cognitive function | |
| Retrospective 1986-91 | 44 | Median 28 months (8 mo-14 yrs) | Children admitted to PICU after warm drowning, 43/44 received CPR at the scene | Minimum of 6 months | A discussion with child’s physician or chart review | 17/44 (39%) had normal functioning or mild neurological deficit | |
| Retrospective 1985-94 | 48 | Median 3.7 years (0.8-15.0 years) | Drowned children who had received ALS at the scene | 1 year | Chart review with POPC | 29/48 (60%) had normal functioning or mild neurological deficit | |
| Case report 1986 | 1 | 2.5 years | Neuropsychological recovery after 66 min submersion, CPR and CPB | 12 years | Neuropsychological testing, neuroimaging | Cognitive difficulties and global memory impairment in follow-up | |
| Retrospective 1994-2008 | 9 | Median 3.7 years (0.8-15.0 years) | Hypothermic drowning victims treated with CPB | 3 years | Neurological and neuropsychological testing | One survived with mild to moderate neurological deficit | |
| Questionnaire | 29 | Median 3.0 (range 1.2-15.7) years | Drowned children who had been resuscitated either bystanders and/or EMS personnel | Median 10.3 years (1.8-21.8 years) | Mailed HRQoL questionnare | Good HRQoL in most of the long term survivors |
Abbreviations: CPR, Cardiopulmonary resuscitation; ALS, advanced life support; POPC, Paediatric Overall Performance Category Scale; HRQoL, Health-related quality of life.