Journal Article10.1136/ADC.2010.202820
Clinical decision rules for children with minor head injury: a systematic review
TL;DR: Of the current decision rules for minor head injury the PECARN rule appears the best for children and infants, with the largest cohort, highest sensitivity and acceptable specificity for clinically significant ICI.
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Abstract: Introduction Clinical decision rules aid clinicians with the management of head injured patients. This study aimed to identify clinical decision rules for children with minor head injury and compare their diagnostic accuracy for detection of intracranial injury (ICI) and injury requiring neurosurgical intervention (NSI). Methods Relevant studies were identified by an electronic search of key databases. Papers in English were included with a cohort of at least 20 children suffering minor head injury (GCS 13–15). Studies of a decision rule derived to identify patients at risk of ICI or NSI had to include a proportion of the cohort undergoing imaging. Study quality was assessed using the QUADAS checklist. Results 16 publications, representing 14 cohorts, with 79 740 patients were included. Only four rules were tested in more than one cohort. Of the validated rules the paediatric emergency care applied research network (PECARN) rule was most consistent (sensitivity 98%; specificity 58%). For neurosurgical injury all had high sensitivity (98–100%) but the children9s head injury algorithm for the prediction of important clinical events (CHALICE) rule had the highest specificity (86%) in its derivation cohort. Conclusion Of the current decision rules for minor head injury the PECARN rule appears the best for children and infants, with the largest cohort, highest sensitivity and acceptable specificity for clinically significant ICI. Application of this rule in the UK would probably result in an unacceptably high rate of CT scans per injury, and continued use of the CHALICE-based NICE guidelines represents an appropriate alternative.
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Citations
Accuracy of PECARN, CATCH, and CHALICE head injury decision rules in children: a prospective cohort study.
Franz E Babl,Franz E Babl,Meredith L Borland,Meredith L Borland,Natalie Phillips,Amit Kochar,Sarah Dalton,Mary McCaskill,John A Cheek,John A Cheek,Yuri Gilhotra,Jeremy Furyk,Jocelyn Neutze,Mark D Lyttle,Mark D Lyttle,Silvia Bressan,Susan Donath,Charlotte Molesworth,Kim Jachno,Brenton Ward,Amanda Williams,Amy Baylis,Louise Crowe,Ed Oakley,Ed Oakley,Stuart R Dalziel +25 more
TL;DR: The sensitivities of three clinical decision rules for head injuries in children were high when used as designed and are an important starting point for clinicians considering the introduction of one of the rules.
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Imaging evidence and recommendations for traumatic brain injury: conventional neuroimaging techniques.
Max Wintermark,Pina C. Sanelli,Yoshimi Anzai,A. John Tsiouris,A. John Tsiouris,Christopher T. Whitlow,T. Jason Druzgal,Alisa D. Gean,Yvonne W. Lui,Alexander Norbash,Cyrus A. Raji,David W. Wright,Michael Zeineh +12 more
TL;DR: A review of the evidence on the utility of various imaging techniques in patients presenting with TBI to provide guidance for evidence-based, clinical imaging protocols is performed and the rationale and background evidence supporting their use is provided.
195
Does This Child Have Appendicitis? A Systematic Review of Clinical Prediction Rules for Children With Acute Abdominal Pain
TL;DR: The PAS and Alvarado scores were the most well validated but neither met the current performance benchmarks, and further research is needed before a CPR for children with suspected appendicitis can be used in routine practice.
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Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network head injury clinical prediction rules are reliable in practice
Deborah Schonfeld,Silvia Bressan,Liviana Da Dalt,Mira N Henien,Jill A Winnett,Lise E. Nigrovic +5 more
TL;DR: In the external validation, the age-based PECARN TBI prediction rules accurately identified children at very low risk for a clinically significant TBI and can be used to assist CT decision making for children with minor blunt head trauma.
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ACR Appropriateness Criteria head trauma--child.
Maura E. Ryan,Susan Palasis,Gaurav Saigal,Adam D. Singer,Boaz Karmazyn,Molly Dempsey,Jonathan R. Dillman,Christopher E. Dory,Matthew D. Garber,Laura L. Hayes,Ramesh S. Iyer,Catherine A. Mazzola,Molly E. Raske,Henry E. Rice,Cynthia K. Rigsby,Paul R. Sierzenski,Peter J. Strouse,Sjirk J. Westra,Sandra L. Wootton-Gorges,Brian D. Coley +19 more
TL;DR: MRI may be helpful in patients with suspected nonaccidental trauma, with which axonal shear injury and ischemia are more common and documentation is critical, as well as in those whose clinical status is discordant with CT findings, but data are currently insufficient to support routine clinical use.
64
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