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Childhood head trauma (TC) is a frequent reason for emergency visits. A bibliographic summary published by Santé Publique France reveals an annual incidence of CD among 0-4 year olds estimated at around 1,340 cases per 100,000 inhabitants in the United States, of which 11% would be intentional (i.e. linked to abuse).
The child presents specificities due to the characteristics of his development, such as :
Within the Hospital Femme Mère Enfant (HFME), the procedure consists in hospitalizing all the children presenting a fracture of the skull. They systematically benefit from clinical monitoring, fundoscopy, an electroencephalogram (EEG) and a 3-month consultation with a neurosurgeon to eliminate any complications, but also to detect the inflicted head trauma.
This treatment entails hospitalization for several days for the child and the parents.
The question of the invariability of this local protocol arises because it entails:
Today, HFME specialists intuitively feel that the complication rate is low. In the literature, there are several articles relating the evolution of these children with an isolated fracture of the skull. A review of the literature shows that only 8 out of 5,000 patients had an aggravation of their scanner (such as the appearance of haemorrhage) and none were operated on. Other studies tend to show the absence of deaths, a very low rate of surgery or neurological deficit. There is a suspicion of abuse in 1 to 20% of cases.
Some studies go even further by proposing and evaluating service protocols allowing simple monitoring in the emergency room, then a return home for children with a skull fracture without intracranial lesion and a Glasgow score ≥ 14. These latest studies therefore put general practitioners and paediatricians back in the front line for the follow-up, even in the short term, of infants with an isolated skull fracture.
This study would make it possible to quantify the complications of mild head trauma (Glasgow 13-15) with isolated skull fracture in infants hospitalized in the HFME, and this with unpublished data (electroencephalogram and fundoscopy). According to the results obtained, this could lead to the modification of the care of infants by proposing a reduction in additional examinations and hospitalization, by introducing outpatient monitoring, and this without putting the infant in danger or neglecting inflicted head truama.
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