This is not something that any of us wants to evaluate in the Emergency Department, but it is a necessary part of the job.
First, look for suspicious or atypical bruises:
A case control study of 95 PICU trauma patients under the age of 4 showed that:
- Bruises on the torso, ear, or neck for a child ≤4 years of age and
- Bruising in any region for an infant <4 months of age were predictive of abuse
These were 97% sensitive and 84% specific for predicting abuse.
Then, initiate the following workup if non-accidental trauma:
Social Work consult
Skeletal survey if <3 years of age
Head CT if:
- <6 months
- Head/facial bruising
Labs to screen for intraabdominal injury
- AST, ALT, Lipase, CBC, PT, PTT
Abdominal CT if:
- Abdominal bruising is present
- And/or if AST and/or ALT >80
Troponin-i for >3 months of age if:
- Signs of injury to chest
- AST and/or ALT >80
- Injury on abdominal CT