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Published in: Child's Nervous System 7/2018

01-07-2018 | Original Paper

MRI in mild pediatric traumatic brain injury: diagnostic overkill or useful tool?

Authors: Gesa Cohrs, Monika Huhndorf, Nils Niemczyk, Lukas J. Volz, Alexander Bernsmeier, Ash Singhal, Naomi Larsen, Michael Synowitz, Friederike Knerlich-Lukoschus

Published in: Child's Nervous System | Issue 7/2018

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Abstract

Purpose

Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a sensitive imaging tool which lacks the burden of ionizing radiation. It is not established as primary diagnostic tool in traumatic brain injury (TBI). The purpose of this study was to evaluate the usefulness of MRI as initial imaging modality in the emergency management of mild pediatric TBI.

Methods

Children (0–18 years, sub-divided in four age-groups) with mild TBI who received MRI in the emergency department were identified. Clinical characteristics and trauma mechanisms were evaluated retrospectively. Univariate and multivariate logistic regression analyses were used to identify clinical factors that might be indicative for trauma sequelae on MRI scans.

Results

An institutional case series of 569 patients (322 male/247 female; age < 18years; (GCS ≥ 13), who received MRI for mild TBI, was analyzed. Multi-sequence imaging (including T2, T2*, FLAIR, and diffusion-weighted sequences) was feasible without sedation in 96.8% of cases (sedation, 1.8%; general anesthesia, 1.4%). MRI revealed trauma-associated findings in 13% of all cases; incidental findings were detected in 4.7%. In our cohort, GCS deterioration, scalp hematoma, clinical signs of skull base fractures, and horseback riding accidents were related to structural trauma sequelae on MRI.

Conclusions

MRI is a practical primary imaging tool for evaluating children with mild TBI in the emergency department. The presented analyses demonstrated that in our institution, MRI imaging is performed frequently in the emergency department. It resulted mostly in normal findings. This may reflect uneasiness of when to perform imaging in mild TBI and appears retrospectively as an “overdo.” There are clinical factors that are more likely associated with MRI-positive findings. Their reliability has to be evaluated in prospective studies in order to formulate further decision rules of when to perform MRI imaging or not.
Literature
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Metadata
Title
MRI in mild pediatric traumatic brain injury: diagnostic overkill or useful tool?
Authors
Gesa Cohrs
Monika Huhndorf
Nils Niemczyk
Lukas J. Volz
Alexander Bernsmeier
Ash Singhal
Naomi Larsen
Michael Synowitz
Friederike Knerlich-Lukoschus
Publication date
01-07-2018
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
Child's Nervous System / Issue 7/2018
Print ISSN: 0256-7040
Electronic ISSN: 1433-0350
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00381-018-3771-4

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