Age<21 years | Yes No |
Glasgow Coma Scale>12 | Yes No |
History of LOC | Yes No |
Posttraumatic amnesia | Yes No |
Dizziness | Yes No |
Palpable skull defect | Yes No |
Sensory deficit | Yes No |
Mental status change | Yes No |
Bicycle related injury | Yes No |
Age <2 years | Yes No |
GCS<15 | Yes No |
Evidence of basilar skull fracture | Yes No |
This 2008 study examined 1000 patients presenting with minor head trauma to four level I pediatric trauma centers (younger than 21 years with mean age 8.9 years). 6.5% had positive findings on CT, with 6 of these 65 positive findings requiring neurosurgical intervention.
Head CT is negative in 83-97% of minor head trauma (MHT) cases; and providing a head CT to all cases is both expensive and exposes children to radiation, possibly unnecessarily.
The goal was to develop a sensitive clinical decision rule that had a high negative predictive value; and thus could enter into the physician's clinical assessment.
Definition of minor head trauma (MHT)
PLUS 1 or both of the following:
The presence of any of the following items led to CT Head being recommended:
The absence of any of these 8 factors gave a 99.3% negative predictive value; and could favor observation of these patients instead of head CT. In this study, 3 of the 65 patients who had intracranial injury were not identified by this rule; however, none of these 3 patients required neurosurgical intervention.
The authors also advise, that the presence of any of these 8 items does not imply that head CT needs to be performed; but instead, that this data does not support exclusion of intracranial injury in such patients.
Reference:
Atabaki SM, Stiell IG, Bazarian JJ, et al. A clinical decision rule for cranial computed tomography in minor pediatric head trauma. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 2008;162(5):439-45.