%0 Journal Article %T Isolated traumatic head injury in children: Analysis of 276 observations %A Bahloul Mabrouk %A Chelly Hedi %A Chaari Anis %A Chabchoub Imen %J Journal of Emergencies, Trauma and Shock %D 2011 %I Medknow Publications %X Background : To determine predictive factors of mortality among children after isolated traumatic brain injury. Materials and Methods : In this retrospective study, we included all consecutive children with isolated traumatic brain injury admitted to the 22-bed intensive care unit (ICU) of Habib Bourguiba University Hospital (Sfax, Tunisia). Basic demographic, clinical, biochemical, and radiological data were recorded on admission and during ICU stay. Results : There were 276 patients with 196 boys (71%) and 80 girls, with a mean age of 6.7 ¡À 3.8 years. The main cause of trauma was road traffic accident (58.3%). Mean Glasgow Coma Scale score was 8 ¡À 2, Mean Injury Severity Score (ISS) was 23.3 ¡À 5.9, Mean Pediatric Trauma Score (PTS) was 4.8 ¡À 2.3, and Mean Pediatric Risk of Mortality (PRISM) was 10.8 ¡À 8. A total of 259 children required mechanical ventilation. Forty-eight children (17.4%) died. Multivariate analysis showed that factors associated with a poor prognosis were PRISM > 24 (OR: 10.98), neurovegetative disorder (OR: 7.1), meningeal hemorrhage (OR: 2.74), and lesion type VI according to Marshall tomographic grading (OR: 13.26). Conclusion : In Tunisia, head injury is a frequent cause of hospital admission and is most often due to road traffic injuries. Short-term prognosis is influenced by demographic, clinical, radiological, and biochemical factors. The need to put preventive measures in place is underscored. %K Acute head injury %K children %K intensive care unit %K motor-vehicle crash %K prognosis %K trauma %U http://www.onlinejets.org/article.asp?issn=0974-2700;year=2011;volume=4;issue=1;spage=29;epage=36;aulast=Bahloul