| Literature DB >> 33619608 |
Michela Colombari1, Claire Troakes2, Stefania Turrina3, Franco Tagliaro3,4, Domenico De Leo3, Safa Al-Sarraj2,5.
Abstract
Abusive head trauma (AHT) in children is notoriously one of the most challenging diagnoses for the forensic pathologist. The pathological "triad", a combination of intracranial subdural haematoma, cerebral oedema with hypoxic-ischaemic changes and retinal haemorrhages, is frequently argued to be insufficient to support a corroborated verdict of abuse. Data from all available English-language scientific literature involving radiological and neuropathological spinal cord examination is reviewed here in order to assess the contribution of spinal cord changes in differentiating abusive from accidental head trauma. In agreement with the statistically proven association between spinal subdural haemorrhage (SDH) and abuse (Choudhary et al. in Radiology 262:216-223, 2012), spinal blood collection proved to be the most indicative finding related to abusive aetiology. The incidence of spinal blood collection is as much as 44-48% when all the spinal cord levels are analysed as opposed to just 0-18% when the assessment is performed at cervical level only, in agreement with the evidence of the most frequent spinal SDH location at thoracolumbar rather than cervical level. In this review, the source of spinal cord blood collection and how the age of the child relates to the position of spinal cord lesions is also discussed. We concluded that the ante mortem MRI examination and post mortem examination of whole-length spinal cord is of fundamental interest for the assessment of abuse in the forensic setting.Entities:
Keywords: Abusive head trauma; Forensic investigation; Shaken baby syndrome; Spinal cord injury; Spinal subdural haemorrhage
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33619608 PMCID: PMC8205921 DOI: 10.1007/s00414-021-02526-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Legal Med ISSN: 0937-9827 Impact factor: 2.686
Spinal cord AHT pathological findings: evidence from neuroradiology (case series)
| Study | Cases | Spinal cord level | Spinal cord injuries | Muscolo-skeletal spinal injuries | Imaging technique | Author’s statement |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rabbitt et al., 2020 [ | 47 AHT and 29 accidental head trauma (mean age and age interval are not given) | All levels | Spinal SDH was the only finding associated with a combination of RH ( | 42% of AHT had ligament injury. | MRI | Spinal injury is seen in most AHT children and might be clinically and forensically valuable. |
| Jauregui et al., 2019 [ | 116 abused and 22,076 non abused (ma 2.1 and 13.9, respectively) | All levels | No increased risk of spinal cord injury in abused compared with non-abused (OR = 1.51). | Abused have increased risk of vertebral fractures at thoraco (OR = 2.97) and lumbar (OR = 1.67) level. | Not reported | Abused with spinal cord/vertebral injury are less likely to be admitted with cervical vertebra column fractures compared with non-abused children (OR = 0.51) |
| Henry et al., 2018 [ | 74 AHT and 14 accidental head trauma (<2 y) | Cervical | 23% of AHT and 1.3% of accidental head trauma had spinal extra-axial haemorrhage. | 9% of AHT and 6% of accidental head trauma had ligamentous injury. | CT MRI | AHT are at increased risk of cervical injuries. |
| Oh et al., 2017 [ | 91 abusive trauma (<9 y, ma 6 mo) | Cervical | 2/91 had SDH, 4 had spinal cord injuries. | 13/91 had ligamentous injuries, 22/91 had soft-tissue injuries. | MRI | In abused children, the rate of positive cervical MRI is up to 31%. |
| Baerg et al.,2017 [ | 53 AHT (<36 mo, ma 5 mo) | Cervical | 1 case of cord injury with cord EDH and a case of an isolated cord EDH. | Ligamentous, vertebral artery shear injuries, atlantoccipital dissociation. | CT MRI | Small children with inflicted trauma had cervical spine injuries in around 15.1% of cases. Evaluation of them should include cervical spine imaging. |
| Jacob et al.,2016 [ | 89 AHT (<5 y, ma 9.1 mo) | Cervical | 18% had SDH. | 67% ligamentous 32% vertebral joint swelling. | MRI | The prevalence of cervical spine injuries in AHT children is high. |
| Kadom et al., 2014 [ | 38 AHT and 26 accidental head trauma and 10 undefined-head trauma (0.6–22.6 mo, ma 5.5 mo) | Cervical | 2 children had spinal cord injuries. | 27/74 had cervical soft-tissue injuries (data for single categories are not reported). | MRI | Spinal MRI does not discriminate AHT from accidental head trauma MRI can be helpful to distinguish traumatic from non-traumatic (but non-traumatic cases were not included in the study). |
| Choudhary et al., 2014 [ | 67 AHT and 46 accidental head trauma and 70 non-traumatic (all <48 months, ma 4 mo, 15 mo, 14 mo, respectively) | All levels | 48% of AHT vs 2% of accidental head trauma had SDH (all in association with intracranial SDH). None of the non-traumatic had SDH. | 78% of AHT vs 46% of accidental head trauma had ligamentous injuries. Nearly none (1%) of the abusive had MSSI | MRI | The statistically proven correlation between occipitocervical ligamentous injuries and intracranial findings (brain ischaemia) suggest upper occipitocervical spinal cord injuries leads to hypoxic-ischaemic encephalopathy. |
| Choudhary et al., 2012 [ | 67 AHT and 70 accidental head trauma (between 0 to 2 yo) who underwent CT/MRI of head and spinal cord | All levels | 46% of AHT had SDH as compared with 1% of accidental head trauma. SDH finding is more frequent at thoracolumbar than cervical levels (63% vs 34%) (all in association with intracranial SDH). | Not mentioned. | CT MRI | Spinal SDH is statistically ( |
| Edelbauer et al., 2012 [ | 6 AHT and 12 non-traumatic (ma 3.3 and 2.5 mo, respectively) | All levels | Spinal SDH was seen in all AHT children from the cervical to the cauda equine. | No vertebral fractures. | US CT MRI RX | Spinal US should be part of the imaging examinations in case of suspected abuse. |
| Kemp et al.,2011 [ | 25 AHT with spinal injuries (1–48 mo) | All levels | Central cord injuries, compression, transection. Stroke, contusion, tethering. | 10/12 of those with cervical lesions and 11/12 of those with thoracolumbar lesions had MSSI, the majority in association with spinal cord injuries. | RX CT MRI | Cervical spinal injuries are more frequent between younger infants (ma 5 mo). Thoracolumbar injuries are mainly seen in older children (13.5 mo). One of the cause of the delayed diagnosis are the unrecognized thoracolumbar injuries. |
| Koumellis et al., 2009 [ | 18 AHT (1–12 mo, ma 3 mo) | All levels | 8/18 (44%) had spinal SDH (all had the same intensity of posterior fossa SDH and in 2 cases spinal collections were in continuity with intracranial collection). | 2/18 spinal fractures on plan radiography. | CT MRI | There is a high incidence of unsuspected spinal SDH in AHT children. The location of it is commonly thoracolumbar rather than cervical. |
| Feldman et al., 1997 [ | 12 AHT (mean age and age interval are not given) 5/12 deceased (1.3–34.1 mo, ma 5.8 mo) | Cervical | MRI showed no cervical spinal cord injuries 4/5 had cervical spine bleeding at PM. | Not mentioned. | MRI | Routine cervical MRI is not convenient to identify cervical spinal cord injuries as well as to recognize abused babies. |
AHT abusive head trauma, CT computed tomography, yo years old, ma mean age, mo months, MRI magnetic resonance, MSSI muscoloskeletal spinal injury, PM post mortem, RH retinal haemorrhages, Rx radiography, SC spinal cord, SDH subdural haematoma, US ultrasound scan
Spinal cord AHT pathological findings: evidence from neuropathology (case series)
| Study | Cases | Spinal cord level | Spinal cord injuries | Muscolo-skeletal spinal injuries | Author’s statement |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Serinelli et al., 2017 [ | 51 homicide victims (42 AHT) (<3 yo) | All levels | Spinal cord injuries at toracholumbar (33%) > lumbosacral 27.5 > cervical 15.5%. | Not mentioned. | When considering the distribution of SC injuries (EDH, SDH, SAH), the thoracic SC was the most frequently involved area of the SC. |
| Brennan et al., 2009 [ | 41 AHT and 11 accidental head trauma (<2 yo) | Cervical | 71% AHT had primary cervical spinal cord injuries: 72% parenchymal, 83% meningeal haemorrhages, 55% nerve roots (avulsion, haemorrhages). | 21% among those AHT with spinal cord injuries had soft-tissue injuries. | Cervical spinal cord injury is a frequent but not universal finding in AHT. Parenchymal/dorsal nerve roots injuries can occur without ligamentous cervical injuries. |
| Geddes et al., 2001 (II) [ | 37 AHT (<9 mo, ma 2.4 mo) 14 non-traumatic (<11 mo, ma 3 mo) | Cervical | 3/28 AHT showed βAPP positivity in cervical cord and/or dorsal nerve roots 8/28 AHT showed βAPP positivity in the lower pons and medulla 0/14 non-traumatic had βAPP positivity. | Not mentioned. | The predominant histological abnormality in AHT is diffuse hypoxic brain damage not axonal injury. |
| Geddes et al.,2001 (I) [ | 53 AHT (0.5–97 mo, ma 4 mo) | Cervical | 3/53 had EDH 3/53 AHT showed βAPP positivity in cervical cord 8 AHT showed βAPP positivity in the lower pons and medulla. | Not mentioned. | AHT damage is age-related: infants (ma 2–3 mo) had thin bilateral intracranial SDH and higher incidence of skull fractures; AI is seen in craniocervical junction. Children >1 yo had larger intracranial SDH collection and higher incidence of extracranial damage: AI is seen in hemispheric with matter. |
| Saternus et al., 2000 [ | 4 AHT (shaking only) (3 autopsied and 1 survived) (4–30 mo, ma 13.7 mo) | Cervical | 1/3 had cervical EDH (dorsal, C2/C3–C5/T2). Survived children had blood-stayed CSF. | No skeletal fractures were found at skeletal survey in 4/4 spine radiographs 2/3 had cervical soft-tissue injuries. | In every case of child autopsy, it is mandatory to look at cervical spinal cord. |
| Shannon et al., 1998 [ | 13 AHT (shaken only) (<2 yo, ma 5 mo) 7 hypoxia, 6 sudden asphyxia children | Cervical | 7/11 AHT showed βAPP positivity in cervical cord and in spinal nerve roots, as opposed to none in the control groups. | Not mentioned. | Cerebral axonal injury is common in shaken babies and may be due in part by hypoxic/ischaemic mechanism. Cervical cord inj. is also common and cannot be attributed to HIE, so a traumatic mechanism may play a crucial role. |
| Feldman et al., 1997 [ | 5 AHT (1.3–34.1 mo, ma 5.8 mo) | Cervical | 1/5 had SDH at the upper cervical cord, in association with cranial SDH 3/5 had SAH at the cervical cord level, in association with similar intracranial findings. | No skeletal fractures were found at skeletal survey in 12/12 spine radiographs. | Routine cervical MRI is not convenient to identify cervical spinal cord injuries as well as to recognize abused babies. |
| Hadley et al., 1989 [ | 13 AHT (shaken only) (ma 3 mo) (6 autopsied) | Cervical | 5/6 had EDH at cervicomedullary junction 4/6 had SDH at cervicomedullary junction 4/6 had ventral spinal contusions at high cervical levels. | Not mentioned. | Haemorrhages and contusions of the high cervical cord may contribute to morbidity and mortality in shaken baby syndrome. |
AHT abusive head trauma, βAPP β amyloid precursor protein, EDH epidural haematoma, yo years old, ma mean age, mo months old, MRI magnetic resonance, SAH Subarachnoid haematoma, SDH subdural haematoma
Spinal cord AHT pathological findings: evidence from neuroradiology (case series and case reports). Is intracranial SDH associated?
| Study | Cases | Spinal cord injuries | Intracranial SDH in AHT cases | Is intracranial SDH inclusion criteria? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rabbitt et al., 2020 [ | 47 AHT and 29 accidental head trauma (mean age and age interval are not given) | Spinal SDH was the only finding associated with a combination of RH ( | Yes (fifty-nine children (78%) who received an MRI spine had an intracranial haemorrhage on MRI brain. Of these, 11 (19%) had co-occurring spinal SDH). | No |
| Hong et al., 2019 [ | Case report of a 5-month-old boy | Spinal SDH from T4 to L5 | Yes | Yes |
| Henry et al., 2018 [ | 74 AHT and 14 accidental head trauma (<2 y) | 23% of AHT and 1.3% of accidental head trauma had extra-axial haemorrhage | Yes (87%) | No |
| Oh et al., 2017 [ | 91 abuse trauma (<9 y, ma 6 mo) | 2/91 had SDH, 4 had spinal cord injuries | Not reported | Yes, but not exclusively |
| Agarwal et al., 2016 [ | Case report of a 6-month-old girl | Spinal SDH from thoracolumbar junction to the sacrum with mild mass effect | Yes | Yes |
| Jacob et al., 2016 [ | 89 AHT (<5 y, ma 9.1 mo) | Overall spinal cord injuries: 69% (67% ligamentous, 18% SDH) | Yes | No |
| Kandom et al., 2014 [ | 38 AHT and 26 accidental head trauma and 10 undefined-head trauma (0.6 mo–22.6 mo, ma 5.5 mo) | 1 child had intrathecal haemorrhage 2 children had spinal cord injuries | Yes | Yes |
| Choundhary et al., 2014 [ | 67 AHT and 46 accidental head trauma and 70 non-traumatic (all <48 months, ma 4 mo, 15 mo, 14 mo, respectively) | 48% of AHT vs 2% of accidental head trauma had SDH (all in association with intracranial SDH). None of the non-traumatic had SDH. | Yes | No |
| Choundhary et al., 2012 [ | 67 AHT and 70 accidental head trauma (between 0 and 2 y) who underwent CT/MRI of head and spinal cord | 46% of AHT had SDH as compared with 1% of accidental head trauma. SDH finding is more frequent at thoracolumbar than cervical levels (63% vs 24%) (all in association with intracranial SDH). Accidental head trauma | Yes | No |
| Edelbauer et al., 2012 [ | 6 AHT and 12 non-traumatic (ma 3.3 and 2.5 months, respectively) | Spinal SDH was seen in all AHT children from the cervical to the cauda equina | Yes | No |
| Gruber et al., 2008 [ | Case report of a 4-month-old boy | T10-L1 subdural haematoma | Yes | No |
| Koumellis et al., 2009 [ | 18 AHT (ma 3 mo, 1–12 mo) | 8/18 (44%) had spinal SDH (all had the same intensity of posterior fossa SDH, and in 2 cases spinal collections were in continuity with intracranial collection) | Yes | No |
| Ghatan et al., 2002 [ | 24-day-old girl | MRI showed ligamentous injury at occipitocervical junction, with atlantoaxial subluxation and narrowing of the spinal canal | Yes | No |
| Feldman et al., 1997 [ | 12 AHT (mean age and age interval are not given) 5/12 deceased (1.3–34.1 mo, ma 5.8 mo) | MRI showed no cervical spinal cord injuries (0/12) 4/5 had cervical spine bleeding at PM | Yes | Yes |
| Diamond et al., 1994 [ | 12-month-old girl | The MRI scan showed a T12-L3 pre-spinal mass possibly of haemorrhagic nature and tethered cord. | No | No |
AHT abusive head trauma, yo years old, ma mean age, mo months, MRI magnetic resonance, PM post mortem, SDH subdural haematoma
Spinal cord AHT pathological findings: evidence from neuropathology (case series and case reports). Is intracranial SDH associated?
| Study | Cases | Spinal cord injuries | Intracranial SDH in AHT cases | Is intracranial SDH inclusion criteria? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Serinelli et al., 2017 [ | 51 homicide victims (42 AHT) (<3 yo) | Spinal cord injuries at toracholumbar (33%) > lumbosacral 27.5 > cervical 15.5% | Yes (82.4%) | No |
| Brennan et al., 2009 [ | 41 AHT and 11 accidental head trauma (<2 yo) | 71% AHT had primary cervical spinal cord injuries: 72% parenchymal, 83% meningeal haemorrhages, 55% nerve roots (avulsion, haemorrhages). | Yes (92%) | No |
| Geddes et al., 2001 (II) [ | 37 AHT (<9 mo, ma 2.4 mo) 14 non-traumatic (<11 mo, ma 3 mo) | 3/28 AHT showed βAPP positivity in cervical cord and/or dorsal nerve roots 8/28 AHT showed βAPP positivity in the lower pons and medulla 0/14 non-traumatic had βAPP positivity. | Yes (81%) | No |
| Geddes et al., 2001 (I) [ | 53 AHT (0.5–97 mo, ma 4 mo) | 3/53 had EDH 3/53 AHT showed βAPP positivity in cervical cord 8 AHT showed βAPP positivity in the lower pons and medulla. | Yes (81%) | No |
| Saternus et al., 2000 [ | 4 AHT (shaking only) (3 autopsied and 1 survived) (4–30 mo, ma 13.7 mo) | 1/3 had cervical EDH (dorsal, C2/C3–C5/T2) Survived children had blood-stained CSF. | Yes (50%) | No |
| Shannon et al., 1998 [ | 13 AHT (shaken only) (<2 yo, ma 5 mo) 7 hypoxia, 6 sudden asphyxia- children. | 7/11 AHT showed βAPP positivity in cervical cord and in spinal nerve roots, as opposed to none of the control groups. | Yes | No |
| Feldman et al., 1997 [ | 5 AHT (1.3–34.1 mo, ma 5.8 mo) | 1/5 had SDH at the upper cervical cord, in continuity with cranial SDH 3/5 had SAH at the cervical cord level, in association with similar intracranial findings | Yes | Yes |
| Hadley et al., 1989 [ | 13 AHT (shaken only) (ma 3 mo) (6 autopsied) | 5/6 had EDH at cervicomedullary junction 4/6 had SDH at cervicomedullary junction 4/6 had ventral spinal contusions at high cervical levels | Yes | No |
AHT abusive head trauma, βAPP β amyloid precursor protein, EDH epidural haematoma, yo years old, ma mean age, mo months old, MRI magnetic resonance, SAH subarachnoid haematoma, SDH subdural haematoma
Fig. 1Hematoxylin-eosin-stained histological sections of thoracic spinal cord with recent SDH in a 5-month-old female victim of abusive head injury (original magnification ×25). a: dura mater, b: arachnoid, c: pia mater, d: spinal cord, SDH subdural haematoma
Fig. 2Hematoxylin-eosin-stained histological sections of spinal cord thoracic segment in a 5-month-old female victim of abusive head injury (original magnification ×50) a: dura mater, b: arachnoid, c: pia mater, d: spinal cord, SDH subdural haematoma
Fig. 3Hematoxylin-eosin-stained histological sections of cervical spinal cord with extradural and subdural haematoma in a 5-month-old female victim of abusive head injury (original magnification ×25) a: dura mater, b: arachnoid, c: pia mater, d: spinal cord, SN spinal nerves, EDH extradural haematoma, SDH subdural haematoma
Fig. 4βAPP showing axonal injury in the posterior nerve roots in the cervical segment in a 4-week-old female victim of abusive head injury (original magnification ×25). SN spinal nerves
Fig. 5βAPP in the posterior nerve roots in cervical segment in a 4-week-old female victim of abusive head injury (original magnification ×50). SN spinal nerves