1. Raised intracranial pressure and retinal haemorrhages in childhood encephalopathies.
- Author
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Minns, Robert A, Jones, Patricia A, Tandon, Anamika, Fleck, Brian W, Mulvihill, Alan O, and Minns, Fiona C
- Subjects
INTRACRANIAL pressure ,BRAIN injuries ,RETINAL imaging ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,HEMORRHAGE ,BRAIN diseases ,LONGITUDINAL method ,RETINA ,EYE hemorrhage ,DISEASE complications - Abstract
Aim: To explore the relationship between raised intracranial pressure (RICP) and retinal haemorrhages in traumatic and non-traumatic childhood encephalopathies.Method: A prospective study of 112 children (35 females and 77 males, age range 0.01mo-17y 8.3mo; mean 5y 8.6mo, median 4y 5.6mo) included 57 accidental traumatic brain injuries (ATBIs), 21 inflicted traumatic brain injuries (ITBIs), and 34 non-traumatic encephalopathy cases. Measurements included intracranial pressure (ICP), cerebral perfusion pressure, pressure-time index of ICP, and number, zone, and layer of retinal haemorrhages on retinal imaging.Results: Group I had measured elevated ICP (n=42), Group II had clinical and/or radiological signs of RICP (n=21), and Group III had normal ICP (n=49). In the combined Groups I and II, 38% had retinal haemorrhages. Multiple logistic regression confirmed that the presence of retinal haemorrhages was significantly related to the presence of RICP independent of age and aetiology; however, the occurrence and overall numbers were not significantly related to the specific ICP level. The numbers of intraretinal (nerve-fibre layer and dot blot) retinal haemorrhages were significantly greater in those with RICP. The ITBI population was significantly different from the other combined aetiological categories.Interpretation: The study results indicate a complex RICP/retinal haemorrhage relationship. There was no evidence of existing retinal haemorrhages being exacerbated or new retinal haemorrhages developing during periods of confirmed RICP. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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