ADVERTISEMENT

CDC Publishes Guideline for Diagnosing and Treating Pediatric mTBI

Neurology Reviews. 2018 October;26(10):1, 56

Management and Treatment

The guideline’s section devoted to management and treatment begins with recommendations for returning to normal activities. Clinicians should recommend restricting physical and cognitive activity during the first several days after pediatric mTBI, according to the authors. After that point, doctors should advise patients and families “to resume a gradual schedule of activity that does not exacerbate symptoms, with close monitoring of symptom expression.” If the patient completes this step successfully, the clinician should offer an active rehabilitation program that progressively reintroduces noncontact aerobic activity that does not worsen symptoms. The number and severity of symptoms should be monitored closely throughout the patient’s recovery. A patient should resume full activity when his or her performance returns to its premorbid level, provided that he or she has no symptoms at rest or with increasing levels of exertion, according to the guideline.

“To assist children returning to school after mTBI, medical and school-based teams should counsel the student and family regarding the process of gradually increasing the duration and intensity of academic activities as tolerated, with the goal of increasing participation without significantly exacerbating symptoms,” say the authors. Return-to-school protocols should be adapted to the severity of the child’s postconcussion symptoms. School personnel should assess the need for additional educational support in students with prolonged symptoms that harm their academic performance, according to the guideline.

If a child with mTBI develops severe headache, especially if the headache is associated with other risk factors or has worsened after mTBI, emergency department professionals should observe him or her and consider obtaining a head CT to evaluate for intracranial injury, say the authors. Health care professionals should explain proper sleep hygiene to all patients with mTBI and their families to facilitate recovery.

If a child with mTBI has cognitive dysfunction, clinicians should attempt to determine its etiology within the context of other mTBI symptoms, say the authors. Treatment for cognitive dysfunction should reflect its presumed etiology, they conclude.

—Erik Greb

Suggested Reading

Lumba-Brown A, Yeates KO, Sarmiento K, et al. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guideline on the diagnosis and management of mild traumatic brain injury among children. JAMA Pediatr. 2018 Sep 4 [Epub ahead of print].

Lumba-Brown A, Yeates KO, Sarmiento K, et al. Diagnosis and management of mild traumatic brain injury in children: a systematic review. JAMA Pediatr. 2018 Sep 4 [Epub ahead of print].

McCrea M, Manley G. State of the science on pediatric mild traumatic brain injury: progress toward clinical translation. JAMA Pediatr. 2018 Sep 4 [Epub ahead of print].