MedImaging

Download Mobile App
Recent News Radiography MRI Ultrasound Nuclear Medicine General/Advanced Imaging Imaging IT Industry News

Imaging Factors Inform Treatment of Penetrating Gunshot Wounds in Children and Adolescents

By MedImaging International staff writers
Posted on 13 Jan 2016
Print article
Researchers examining Intracranial Gunshot Wounds (GSWs) in children and adolescents have identified several factors predictive of patient outcomes.

The researchers found nine clinical, laboratory, and Computed Tomography (CT) imaging factors that were statistically associated with mortality. Several of these factors included bilateral fixed and dilated pupils, intravascular volume depletion, systolic blood pressure lower than 100 mmHg anemia, a Glasgow Coma Scale score of 5 or lower, and injuries to various brain injuries involving various parts of the brain or blood vessels.

The results of the study were published in the January 5, 2016, issue of the Journal of Neurosurgery. The researchers from the Department of Neurosurgery at the University of Tennessee (Knoxville, TN, USA), and a number of other institutions, looked at the medical records of pediatric patients aged 18 years or younger who received treatment for penetrating GSWs to the head. The study included records of 71 patients with a mean age at presentation of 14 years, suffering only from a single trauma. Thirty-nine (55%) of the patients underwent Surgery.

The primary outcome in the study was the Glasgow Outcome Scale score, and the overall mortality rate was 48%, or 34 of the 71 patients. Thirty of the 37 surviving (81%) achieved a favorable outcome (Glasgow Outcome Scale Score 4 or 5).

The results demonstrated the importance of collecting clinical, laboratory, and radiological factors associated with mortality, to help guide treatment plans and predict in children and adolescents with GSW. The researchers found that only bilateral fixed and dilated pupils are a reliable indicator for predicting mortality. The other predictive factors collected in the study were only useful to help inform decision-making for treatment and care the pediatric patients. The authors found that children have a good ability to overcome severe neurological injuries.

The authors, said, “When presented with a child who has sustained an intracranial GSW, the neurosurgeon must quickly decide whether the child has a fatal injury, an injury that is potentially nonfatal but very likely to have a devastating neurological outcome, or a survivable injury with a reasonable chance of maintaining or regaining meaningful neurological function.”

Related Links:

University of Tennessee


Ultrasound Table
Women’s Ultrasound EA Table
Ultrasonic Pocket Doppler
SD1
X-Ray Illuminator
X-Ray Viewbox Illuminators
Ultrasound Imaging System
P12 Elite

Print article

Channels

MRI

view channel
Image: Comparison showing 3T and 7T scans for the same participant (Photo courtesy of P Simon Jones/University of Cambridge)

Ultra-Powerful MRI Scans Enable Life-Changing Surgery in Treatment-Resistant Epileptic Patients

Approximately 360,000 individuals in the UK suffer from focal epilepsy, a condition in which seizures spread from one part of the brain. Around a third of these patients experience persistent seizures... Read more

Ultrasound

view channel
Image: The new type of Sonogenetic EchoBack-CAR T cell (Photo courtesy of Longwei Liu/USC)

Smart Ultrasound-Activated Immune Cells Destroy Cancer Cells for Extended Periods

Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy has emerged as a highly promising cancer treatment, especially for bloodborne cancers like leukemia. This highly personalized therapy involves extracting... Read more

Imaging IT

view channel
Image: The new Medical Imaging Suite makes healthcare imaging data more accessible, interoperable and useful (Photo courtesy of Google Cloud)

New Google Cloud Medical Imaging Suite Makes Imaging Healthcare Data More Accessible

Medical imaging is a critical tool used to diagnose patients, and there are billions of medical images scanned globally each year. Imaging data accounts for about 90% of all healthcare data1 and, until... Read more