• Tropical doctor · Jan 2013

    Paediatric head injuries in the Kwazulu-Natal Province of South Africa: a developing country perspective.

    • Ebenezer K Okyere-Dede, Munyaradzi C Nkalakata, Tshepo Nkomo, G P Hadley, and Thandinkosi E Madiba.
    • Department of Surgery, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Congella, Durban 4013, South Africa.
    • Trop Doct. 2013 Jan 1; 43 (1): 1-4.

    AbstractWe investigated the causes, management and outcome of head injuries in paediatric patients admitted to the paediatric surgery unit at King Edward VIII Hospital over a 3-year period, from 1999 to 2001. There were 506 patients (331 male; M:F ratio 2:1) and the mean age was 71.99 +36.8 months (2 weeks to 180 months). The injuries were due to: motor vehicle crashes (324); falls (121); assault (30); inadvertent injury (23); and unknown (11). Forty-nine patients (9%) were admitted with a Glasgow Coma Scale ≤8. The most common intracranial pathology on computed tomography was: intracranial haematoma/haemorrhage (44); contusion (16); and brain oedema (10). Nineteen patients (3.4%) underwent neurosurgical intervention and the rest were managed conservatively. Eighteen died in hospital (3.6%). The mean hospital stay was 5 ± 12 days. Twenty-three patients (4.5%) were discharged with neurological sequelae. Few paediatric patients are admitted with severe head injury: the majority from blunt injury caused by motor vehicle crashes. Management mainly requires simple neurological observation in a general ward with a surprisingly good prognosis. Specific protocols for paediatric head injuries have been proposed based on these findings.

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