• Am J Forensic Med Pathol · Jun 2001

    Practice Guideline Guideline

    Position paper on fatal abusive head injuries in infants and young children.

    • M E Case, M A Graham, T C Handy, J M Jentzen, J A Monteleone, and National Association of Medical Examiners Ad Hoc Committee on Shaken Baby Syndrome.
    • Department of Pathology, St Louis University Health Sciences Center, Missouri 63104-8298, USA.
    • Am J Forensic Med Pathol. 2001 Jun 1; 22 (2): 112-22.

    AbstractThis article represents the work of the National Association of Medical Examiners Ad Hoc Committee on shaken baby syndrome. Abusive head injuries include injuries caused by shaking as well as impact to the head, either by directly striking the head or by causing the head to strike another object or surface. Because of anatomic and developmental differences in the brain and skull of the young child, the mechanisms and types of injuries that affect the head differ from those that affect the older child or adult. The mechanism of injury produced by inflicted head injuries in these children is most often rotational movement of the brain within the cranial cavity. Rotational movement of the brain damages the nervous system by creating shearing forces, which cause diffuse axonal injury with disruption of axons and tearing of bridging veins, which causes subdural and subarachnoid hemorrhages, and is very commonly associated with retinal schisis and hemorrhages. Recognition of this mechanism of injury may be helpful in severe acute rotational brain injuries because it facilitates understanding of such clinical features as the decrease in the level of consciousness and respiratory distress seen in these injured children. The pathologic findings of subdural hemorrhage, subarachnoid hemorrhage, and retinal hemorrhages are offered as "markers" to assist in the recognition of the presence of shearing brain injury in young children.

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