Trauma (peds): Difference between revisions
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{{PediatricPage|Trauma (main)}} | |||
==Background== | ==Background== | ||
*Key is to recognize and treat [[pediatric shock|shock]] early (before blood pressure decreases), | *Key is to recognize and treat [[pediatric shock|shock]] early (before blood pressure decreases), | ||
| Line 7: | Line 8: | ||
*80% of pediatric trauma deaths associated with neurological injury (see [[pediatric head trauma]]) | *80% of pediatric trauma deaths associated with neurological injury (see [[pediatric head trauma]]) | ||
{{Locations of Possible Life-Threatening Bleeding}} | |||
{{Pediatric car seat rules}} | {{Pediatric car seat rules}} | ||
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*[[FAST]] exam | *[[FAST]] exam | ||
*Consider as indicated: | *Consider as indicated: | ||
**CBC, coags, T&S | **CBC, coags, T&S, [[LFTs]] for abdominal trauma<ref>The Utility of Laboratory Testing in Pediatric Trauma: A Primer from TAMING OF THE SRU Dec 13, 2019 available at http://www.tamingthesru.com/blog/grand-rounds/diagnostics/labs-in-peds-trauma</ref> | ||
**Plain films | **Plain films | ||
**[[CT head]], [[cervical spine clearance]] clinically or with imaging | **[[CT head]], [[cervical spine clearance]] clinically or with imaging | ||
| Line 38: | Line 40: | ||
==Management== | ==Management== | ||
*[[ATLS]] | *[[ATLS]] | ||
*In ED give IVF at 20cc/kg, if unresponsive after 40cc/kg give | *In ED give [[IVF]] at 20cc/kg, if unresponsive after 40cc/kg give [[PRBCs]] at 10cc/kg (can start with PRBC if presents in decompensated shock & multiple injuries suspected) | ||
==Disposition== | ==Disposition== | ||
| Line 45: | Line 47: | ||
==See Also== | ==See Also== | ||
*[[Pediatric head trauma]] | *[[Pediatric head trauma]] | ||
**[[PECARN head trauma rule]] | |||
*[[Trauma (main)]] | *[[Trauma (main)]] | ||
== Calculators == | |||
{{PECARN_Calculator}} | |||
==External Links== | ==External Links== | ||
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==References== | ==References== | ||
<references/> | <references/> | ||
[[Category:Pediatrics]] | [[Category:Pediatrics]] | ||
[[Category:Trauma]] | [[Category:Trauma]] | ||
Latest revision as of 15:06, 21 March 2026
This page is for pediatric patients. For adult patients, see: Trauma (main)
Background
- Key is to recognize and treat shock early (before blood pressure decreases),
- once child has signs and symptoms of shock, may have lost 25% of blood volume
- BP not usually helpful sign of blood loss in pediatric patients
- Can have high, low, or normal BP in shock
- pulse pressure is helpful
- 80% of pediatric trauma deaths associated with neurological injury (see pediatric head trauma)
Locations of Possible Life-Threatening Bleeding
- External
- Internal
- Thoracic cavity
- Peritoneal cavity
- Retroperitoneal space (i.e. pelvic fracture)
- Femur fracture (into muscle/subcutaneous tissue)
Pediatric car seat rules[1]
| Age | Type of Car Seat | Position | Comments |
| <2 years old | Infant-only or convertible car seat | Back seat, rear-facing | If child height or weight > seat limit (usually ~40-65lbs), go to next age up |
| 2-8 years old | Convertible or combination car seat | Back seat, forward-facing | If child height or weight > seat limit, go to next age up |
| 8-12 years old | Booster seat | Back seat, forward-facing | If child height or weight > seat limit (usually 4' 9"), go to next age up |
| 12-13 years old | Lap and shoulder seat belt | Front or back seat, forward-facing |
Clinical Features
- Peds assessment triad: appearance, work of breathing & circulation (skin color)
- Child's size allows for distribution of injuries
- multi-system trauma is common
- internal organs more susceptible to injury due to anterior placement of liver and spleen (as well as less protective muscle & fat)
- Kidneys also less well protected and more mobile, prone to decelleration injury
- Wadell Triad in auto vs. pedestrian child= femoral shaft fracture, intraabdominal/intrathoracic injury, and contralateral head injury
Differential Diagnosis
Evaluation
- FAST exam
- Consider as indicated:
- CBC, coags, T&S, LFTs for abdominal trauma[2]
- Plain films
- CT head, cervical spine clearance clinically or with imaging
- CT abdomen/pelvis[3]
- Significant intra-abdominal injury after blunt torso trauma highly unlikely (0.1%) if all of the following are true:
- Glasgow coma scale ≥14
- No evidence of abdominal wall trauma or seat belt sign
- No abdominal tenderness, abdominal pain, or vomiting
- No thoracic wall trauma or decreased breath sounds
- Significant intra-abdominal injury after blunt torso trauma highly unlikely (0.1%) if all of the following are true:
Management
- ATLS
- In ED give IVF at 20cc/kg, if unresponsive after 40cc/kg give PRBCs at 10cc/kg (can start with PRBC if presents in decompensated shock & multiple injuries suspected)
Disposition
- Depends on underlying injury
See Also
Calculators
PECARN Pediatric Head Injury
| Age Group | Select One |
|---|---|
| Patient Age | 1 <2 years ≥2 years |
| Criteria | No | Yes |
|---|---|---|
| GCS <15 (altered mental status) | 1 | |
| Palpable skull fracture | 1 | |
| Occipital/parietal/temporal scalp hematoma | 1 | |
| Loss of consciousness ≥5 seconds | 1 | |
| Not acting normally per parent | 1 | |
| Severe mechanism of injury (MVC with ejection/rollover/fatality, pedestrian/cyclist without helmet struck by motorized vehicle, fall >3 feet, head struck by high-impact object) | 1 | |
| Risk Factors (<2y) | / 6 | |
| Criteria | No | Yes |
|---|---|---|
| GCS <15 (altered mental status) | 1 | |
| Signs of basilar skull fracture (hemotympanum, raccoon eyes, Battle sign, CSF otorrhea/rhinorrhea) | 1 | |
| Vomiting | 1 | |
| Loss of consciousness | 1 | |
| Severe headache | 1 | |
| Severe mechanism of injury (MVC with ejection/rollover/fatality, pedestrian/cyclist without helmet struck by motorized vehicle, fall >5 feet, head struck by high-impact object) | 1 | |
| Risk Factors (≥2y) | / 6 | |
| Interpretation (for selected age group) | |
|---|---|
| 0 | Very low risk — ciTBI risk <0.02% (<2y) or <0.05% (≥2y). CT not recommended. |
| 1 (intermediate*) | Low risk — ciTBI risk ~0.9% (<2y) or ~0.8% (≥2y). Observation vs. CT. *Only if GCS=15 and no skull fracture/AMS. Consider observation for 4-6 hours. |
| GCS<15 or skull fx | High risk — ciTBI risk 4.4% (<2y) or 4.3% (≥2y). CT recommended. |
| References |
|---|
|
External Links
- Pediatric Emergency Playbook Podcast -- Multisystem Trauma in Children Part One: Airway, Chest Tubes, and Resuscitative Thoracotomy
- Pediatric Emergency Playbook Podcast -- Multisystem Trauma in Children Part Two: Massive Transfusion, Trauma Imaging, and Resuscitative Pearls
References
- ↑ AAP 2011. http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/content/pediatrics/early/2011/03/21/peds.2011-0213.full.pdf
- ↑ The Utility of Laboratory Testing in Pediatric Trauma: A Primer from TAMING OF THE SRU Dec 13, 2019 available at http://www.tamingthesru.com/blog/grand-rounds/diagnostics/labs-in-peds-trauma
- ↑ Holmes JF et al. Identifying Children at Very Low Risk of Clinically Important Blunt Abdominal Injuries. Ann Emerg Med. 2013
