J Korean Child Neurol Soc.  1999 May;6(2):394-399.

A Case of Shaken Impact Syndrome with Encephalomalacia

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Pediatrics, College of medicine, SoonChunHyang University, Seoul, Korea.

Abstract

Head trauma is the most frequent cause of morbidity and death in abused children. The shaken impact syndrome results from both types of injury-impact and severe acceleration-deceleration effects associated with impact causing shearing forces on the bridging veins and parechyma. To make the diagnosis of shaken impact syndrome, the physician should be suspicious of every child under 1 year of age with non-accidental brain injury and altered consciousness. Certain clinical features such as retinal hemorrhage , complex, depressed, or diastatic fractures, and associated findings such as metaphyseal fracture and failure to thrive make the diagnosis of abuse more likely. Yet in the absence of these findings, the diagnosis of abuse rests upon discrepancies between the history given and the injury incurred. We experienced a case of shaken impact syndrome in a 13 month-old female who had subdural hemorrhage, fractures of skull and rib, and encephalomalacia, so we report and review the related literatures.

Keyword

Shaken impact syndrome; Child abuse; Subdural hemorrhage; Encepha lomalacia

MeSH Terms

Brain Injuries
Child
Child Abuse
Consciousness
Craniocerebral Trauma
Diagnosis
Encephalomalacia*
Failure to Thrive
Female
Hematoma, Subdural
Humans
Infant
Retinal Hemorrhage
Ribs
Skull
Veins
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