Shaken Baby Syndrome: A Nursing Perspective.
Citation:
Chiocca EM: Shaken baby syndrome: a nursing perspective. Pediatric Nursing 21(1):33-38, January-February 1995.
Abstract
Notes:
- Abusive parents often have unrealistic expectations of children and expect the child to meet their needs rather than vice versa.
- Differential diagnoses include birth trauma, aneurysms, hanging, strangulation, central nervous system infections, anemia, thrombocytopenia, SIDS, unrestrained motor vehicle accidents, metabolic disturbances, electrolyte disorders and seizure disorders.
- It may take 24-48 hours for subdural bleeding to manifest after an injury if the bleeding is venous rather than arterial.
- A lumbar puncture should be done on any infant with nonspecific symptoms such as vomiting and lethargy, to rule out sepsis.
- Interview parents and caregivers separately for stories of how the injury occurred. Assess low stress tolerance, methods of discipline, marital discord and unrealistic expectations for the children.
- Shaking is rarely an isolated occurrence. It generally accompanies other types of abuse.
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