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Journal Article

Citation

Wang H, Zhou Y, Liu J, Ou L, Han J, Xiang L. Injury 2018; 49(2): 219-225.

Affiliation

Department of Orthopedics, General Hospital of Shenyang Military Area Command of Chinese PLA, Shenyang, Liaoning 110016, China.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.injury.2017.11.039

PMID

29203200

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To investigate the epidemiological features of child and adolescent (≤18 years old) patients managed for traumatic skull fractures (TSKFs) and associated traumatic brain injury (TBI).

DESIGN: 393 Patients who were children and adolescent who had TSKFs admitted to our university affiliated hospitals between January 2003 and December 2010. The incidence and patterns were summarized with respect to different age group, admission time and etiology. SETTING: Two university-affiliated hospitals from January 2003 to May 2010.

RESULTS: The most common etiologies were motor vehicle collisions (MVCs) (166, 42.2%) and high fall (101, 25.7%). The most common skull fracture sites were parietal fractures (n=111, 28.2%) and basilar skull fracture (n=111, 28.2%). A total of 300 (76.3%) patients suffered TBI and 23 (5.9%) patients suffered OCI. The most common intracranial hemorrhage was epidural hemorrhage (n=94, 23.9%). The frequencies of emergency admission, medical insurance and associated injuries were 56.2% (n=221), 22.4% (n=88) and 37.2% (n=146). The frequencies of TBI and associated injuries were significantly increased from 53.45% to 76.3% and from 6.9% to 41.6% with age, respectively.

CONCLUSIONS: MVCs were the most common etiologies. Parietal and basilar skull fractures, epidural hemorrhages were the most common fracture sites and intracranial hemorrhage.

Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.


Language: en

Keywords

Adolescent; Child; Epidemiology; Traumatic brain injury; Traumatic skull fractures

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