Severe brain trauma to the fetus in a car accident: Literature review and a clinical case

Car accidents are the main cause of trauma during pregnancy. Even a non-severe accident is associated with a high risk of injury and unfavorable outcome for the fetus, especially in the event of placental abruption. Major agents leading to a trauma could also include safety belt and safety airbags....

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: N. A. Vostrikov, I. V. Ponomareva, O. V. Cheremisinov, M. A. Sherman
Format: Article
Language:Russian
Published: MONIKI 2021-07-01
Series:Alʹmanah Kliničeskoj Mediciny
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.almclinmed.ru/jour/article/view/1449
id doaj-8acbf151d3e14690851882f4ec3146f8
record_format Article
spelling doaj-8acbf151d3e14690851882f4ec3146f82021-07-28T21:11:25ZrusMONIKIAlʹmanah Kliničeskoj Mediciny2072-05052587-92942021-07-0149323123810.18786/2072-0505-2021-49-015784Severe brain trauma to the fetus in a car accident: Literature review and a clinical caseN. A. Vostrikov0I. V. Ponomareva1O. V. Cheremisinov2M. A. Sherman3The Center of Traumatology, Orthopedics and NeurosurgeryRegional Clinical Hospital No. 3Kirov Regional Clinical HospitalKirov State Medical UniversityCar accidents are the main cause of trauma during pregnancy. Even a non-severe accident is associated with a high risk of injury and unfavorable outcome for the fetus, especially in the event of placental abruption. Major agents leading to a trauma could also include safety belt and safety airbags. Blunt abdominal trauma during a car accident is associated with such type of intrauterine injury as fetal skull fractures and various intracranial hemorrhages. Despite a common viewpoint on relatively high death rates in this population, it is not infrequent that fetal trauma has a favorable outcome without any clinically significant neurological deficiency.The paper presents an analysis of the main outcomes of intrauterine brain injury and associated factors. As an illustration, we describe a case of a car accident related brain injury to a fetus at 38 week of gestation, with skull fracture, brain contusion, and subarachnoidal, epidural and subdural, parenchymal and intraventricular hemorrhages induced by the safety belt, with the mother being virtually uninjured. After treatment, the patient was discharged from the hospital in a satisfactory state, without clinically significant neurological symptoms and signs. A 8-months follow-up of the infant showed some delay in brain maturation manifesting as benign epileptiform discharges of childhood and magnetic resonance imaging patterns.It is highly likely, that the leading factors ensuring a favorable outcome of a intrauterine severe brain trauma (without fatal trauma to the mother and fetus) are as follows: correct obstetric strategy, late gestational age and absence of a massive parenchymal and/or intraventricular bleeding. After the short-term clinical recovery from a severe intrauterine brain trauma and in addition to it, proper follow-up of the child is essential because of a high risk of long-term cerebral and functional abnormalities, mostly paroxysmal, behavioral and cognitive.https://www.almclinmed.ru/jour/article/view/1449car accidenttrauma during pregnancyfetal brain traumabenign epileptiform discharges of childhoodabnormal brain maturationbenign age-dependent epilepsy
collection DOAJ
language Russian
format Article
sources DOAJ
author N. A. Vostrikov
I. V. Ponomareva
O. V. Cheremisinov
M. A. Sherman
spellingShingle N. A. Vostrikov
I. V. Ponomareva
O. V. Cheremisinov
M. A. Sherman
Severe brain trauma to the fetus in a car accident: Literature review and a clinical case
Alʹmanah Kliničeskoj Mediciny
car accident
trauma during pregnancy
fetal brain trauma
benign epileptiform discharges of childhood
abnormal brain maturation
benign age-dependent epilepsy
author_facet N. A. Vostrikov
I. V. Ponomareva
O. V. Cheremisinov
M. A. Sherman
author_sort N. A. Vostrikov
title Severe brain trauma to the fetus in a car accident: Literature review and a clinical case
title_short Severe brain trauma to the fetus in a car accident: Literature review and a clinical case
title_full Severe brain trauma to the fetus in a car accident: Literature review and a clinical case
title_fullStr Severe brain trauma to the fetus in a car accident: Literature review and a clinical case
title_full_unstemmed Severe brain trauma to the fetus in a car accident: Literature review and a clinical case
title_sort severe brain trauma to the fetus in a car accident: literature review and a clinical case
publisher MONIKI
series Alʹmanah Kliničeskoj Mediciny
issn 2072-0505
2587-9294
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Car accidents are the main cause of trauma during pregnancy. Even a non-severe accident is associated with a high risk of injury and unfavorable outcome for the fetus, especially in the event of placental abruption. Major agents leading to a trauma could also include safety belt and safety airbags. Blunt abdominal trauma during a car accident is associated with such type of intrauterine injury as fetal skull fractures and various intracranial hemorrhages. Despite a common viewpoint on relatively high death rates in this population, it is not infrequent that fetal trauma has a favorable outcome without any clinically significant neurological deficiency.The paper presents an analysis of the main outcomes of intrauterine brain injury and associated factors. As an illustration, we describe a case of a car accident related brain injury to a fetus at 38 week of gestation, with skull fracture, brain contusion, and subarachnoidal, epidural and subdural, parenchymal and intraventricular hemorrhages induced by the safety belt, with the mother being virtually uninjured. After treatment, the patient was discharged from the hospital in a satisfactory state, without clinically significant neurological symptoms and signs. A 8-months follow-up of the infant showed some delay in brain maturation manifesting as benign epileptiform discharges of childhood and magnetic resonance imaging patterns.It is highly likely, that the leading factors ensuring a favorable outcome of a intrauterine severe brain trauma (without fatal trauma to the mother and fetus) are as follows: correct obstetric strategy, late gestational age and absence of a massive parenchymal and/or intraventricular bleeding. After the short-term clinical recovery from a severe intrauterine brain trauma and in addition to it, proper follow-up of the child is essential because of a high risk of long-term cerebral and functional abnormalities, mostly paroxysmal, behavioral and cognitive.
topic car accident
trauma during pregnancy
fetal brain trauma
benign epileptiform discharges of childhood
abnormal brain maturation
benign age-dependent epilepsy
url https://www.almclinmed.ru/jour/article/view/1449
work_keys_str_mv AT navostrikov severebraintraumatothefetusinacaraccidentliteraturereviewandaclinicalcase
AT ivponomareva severebraintraumatothefetusinacaraccidentliteraturereviewandaclinicalcase
AT ovcheremisinov severebraintraumatothefetusinacaraccidentliteraturereviewandaclinicalcase
AT masherman severebraintraumatothefetusinacaraccidentliteraturereviewandaclinicalcase
_version_ 1721262257550131200