Cases reported "Prenatal Injuries"

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1/14. Investigations of crashes involving pregnant occupants.

    case reports of 16 crashes involving pregnant occupants are presented that illustrate the main conclusions of a crash-investigation program that includes 42 crashes investigated to date. Some unusual cases that are exceptions to the overall trends are also described. The study indicates a strong association between adverse fetal outcome and both crash severity and maternal injury. Proper restraint use, with and without airbag deployment, generally leads to acceptable fetal outcomes in lower severity crashes, while it does not affect fetal outcome in high-severity crashes. Compared to properly restrained pregnant occupants, improperly restrained occupants have a higher risk of adverse fetal outcome in lower severity crashes, which comprise the majority of all motor-vehicle collisions.
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2/14. Intrauterine stab leading to a radial nerve palsy.

    Penetrating injuries to the gravid uterus are rare. This report documents a fetus that sustained a complete radial nerve palsy (a hemopneumothorax) after a knife wound (complete nerve transection is suspected). Surgical exploration of the nerve was delayed because of respiratory distress. Six weeks later, when exploration was scheduled to be undertaken, some recovery was noted, and exploration was thus deferred. The injury recovered completely in the absence of formal repair.
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keywords = injury
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3/14. Fetal trauma: brain imaging in four neonates.

    The purpose of this paper is to describe brain pathology in neonates after major traffic trauma in utero during the third trimester. Our patient cohort consisted of four neonates born by emergency cesarean section after car accident in the third trimester of pregnancy. The median gestational age ( n=4) was 36 weeks (range: 30-38). Immediate post-natal and follow-up brain imaging consisted of cranial ultrasound ( n=4), computed tomography (CT) ( n=1) and post-mortem magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) ( n=1). pathology findings were correlated with the imaging findings ( n=3). Cranial ultrasound demonstrated a huge subarachnoidal hemorrhage ( n=1), subdural hematoma ( n=1), brain edema with inversion of the diastolic flow ( n=1) and severe ischemic changes ( n=1). In one case, CT demonstrated the presence and extension of the subarachnoidal hemorrhage, a parietal fracture and a limited intraventricular hemorrhage. Cerebellar hemorrhage and a small cerebral frontal contusion were seen on post-mortem MRI in a child with a major subarachnoidal hemorrhage on ultrasound. None of these four children survived (three children died within 2 days and one child died after 1 month). Blunt abdominal trauma during pregnancy can cause fetal cranial injury. In our cases, skull fracture, intracranial hemorrhage and hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy were encountered.
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keywords = injury
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4/14. Fetal intracranial injuries in a preterm infant after maternal motor vehicle accident: a case report.

    OBJECTIVE: To present a case of fetal intracranial injuries in a preterm infant after maternal motor vehicle accident and to review the relevant literature. DESIGN: Case report. SETTING: Neonatal and pediatric intensive care unit of a children's hospital. PATIENT: Preterm infant (gestational age, 30-6/7 wks) with intracranial injuries after maternal motor vehicle accident. RESULTS: Whereas the mother had only a closed femur fracture, her infant sustained subdural, subarachnoid, and intracerebral hemorrhages in the left parietal and temporal lobes most likely attributable to direct fetal trauma. Massive fetomaternal hemorrhage may have led additionally to hypoxia-ischemia contributing indirectly to the injury. At the last follow-up visit (chronological age, 20 months; corrected age, 18 months), there was evidence of a persistent right-sided hemiparesis in an otherwise normally developed infant. CONCLUSIONS: Motor vehicle accidents during pregnancy can be associated with fetal mortality and significant morbidity, even in the absence of severe maternal injuries. Direct (hemorrhagic) and indirect (hypoxic-ischemic) intracranial injuries should be actively sought with appropriate imaging studies.
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ranking = 1
keywords = injury
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5/14. Extensive brain injury in a premature infant following a relatively minor maternal motor vehicle accident with airbag deployment.

    Traumatic injury following a motor vehicle accident during pregnancy has an enormous potential for fetal injury and demise. With the advent of seat belts, shoulder restraints and airbags, and improved maternal survival, the most common cause of fetal loss is placental injury. However, the safety of airbag deployment during pregnancy and in particular during the latter stages, and the potential for fetal trauma remains unclear. We report a case of extensive neurological injury of a premature infant with minimal maternal trauma associated with deployment of an airbag following a minor motor vehicle accident.
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ranking = 8
keywords = injury
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6/14. paraplegia and congenital contractures as a consequence of intrauterine trauma.

    We present a newborn infant with paraplegia and contractures of the lower limbs, consistent with neurologic injury rather than malformation. The mother was involved in a severe motor vehicle accident during the sixth month of pregnancy. We propose that this infant's injuries are a result of that accident.
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ranking = 1
keywords = injury
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7/14. A case of spinal cord injury that occurred in utero.

    Spinal cord injury is a rare occurrence that is often difficult to diagnose. This report describes a 2-year-old male with cervicothoracic spinal cord injury. The injury is thought to have occurred in the fetal period because the patient's thorax was markedly hypoplastic at birth and his mother had noticed a decrease in fetal movements for several weeks before the birth. The deep tendon reflex of the upper and lower extremities was absent at birth, as observed in other cases of spinal cord injury. It was noteworthy that deep tendon reflex of the upper and lower extremities remained decreased at 2 years of age despite the injury being located at C(7)-T(1). Based on this case, we propose that spinal cord injuries occurring in utero display different reflex responses from those occurring at birth.
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ranking = 9
keywords = injury
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8/14. Gunshot wounds to the gravid uterus. A case report.

    A pregnant woman sustained an abdominal gunshot wound during the second trimester; the bullet injured multiple loops of bowel and passed through the uterus, placenta and fetus. Although the stillborn fetus was delivered by cesarean section, a review of the literature indicated that operative delivery is not indicated when the fetus has died already. Labor and delivery are well tolerated, and an unnecessary hysterotomy is thus avoided. If labor does not ensue spontaneously, it can be induced. Approximately 40% of fetuses will survive the initial injury. In past reviews the risk of prematurity often outweighed the benefits of delivery of those infants. Advances in neonatology now make survival routine after 28 weeks' gestation, and viable fetuses should be delivered promptly by cesarean section to decrease the risk of delayed death from fetal or placental injury.
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ranking = 2
keywords = injury
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9/14. Multiple uterine rupture and crushing injury of the fetal skull after blunt maternal trauma. A case report.

    Multiple pelvic fractures and explosive-type uterine lacerations occurred in a previously healthy 17-year-old primigravida involved in a motor vehicle accident. The fetus suffered a crushed skull and was completely extruded with the placenta from the uterus. Treatment was complicated by severe disseminated intravascular coagulation with secondary fibrinolysis. thrombelastography enabled us to rapidly evaluate the patient's coagulation status and to monitor her response to goal-directed therapeutic interventions (surgery, specific blood product therapy and epsilon-aminocaproic acid).
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ranking = 4
keywords = injury
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10/14. Fetal complications related to minor maternal trauma.

    The active lifestyle of pregnant women, in combination with the increased incidence of violence in society, place women at greater risk for accidental injury during pregnancy. This identification of increased risk has altered the health care management of mother and fetus after injury. The health care provider treating this patient population must perform thorough maternal-fetal assessments and be suspicious of fetal compromise, even in the face of maternal stability.
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ranking = 2
keywords = injury
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