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Growth monitoring following traumatic brain injury
17
Citations
6
References
2008
Year
Traumatic Brain InjuryBrain LesionBrain Injury RehabilitationGrowth MonitoringIntracranial PressureBrain InjuryNeurologyNeurorehabilitationNeuropathologyPituitary FunctionPediatric NeurosurgeryPediatric Traumatic Brain InjuryPediatric EndocrinologyRehabilitationRapid Trauma AssessmentChild DevelopmentPediatricsConcussionMedicine
Hypopituitarism is an important consequence of traumatic brain injury (TBI). Growth monitoring can be used as an indicator of pituitary function in children. A retrospective audit of case notes of 123 children who required intensive care unit admission with TBI found that only 71 (33%) of 212 attendances in 38 of 85 children followed up had documented height and weight measurements. Children were reviewed in 11 different specialty clinics, which showed a wide variation in the frequency of growth monitoring. Serial growth measurements were available for only 22 patients (17%), which showed a reduction in height standard deviation scores (0.17 (SD 0.33), p = 0.017) over a mean follow-up period of 25.2 (SD 21.6) months. In conclusion, growth monitoring following TBI was poorly performed in this cohort, highlighting the need for a co-ordinated approach by primary and secondary care and all departments in tertiary centres involved in the follow-up of children with TBI.
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