Increasing Use of Rapid Magnetic Resonance Imaging for Children with Blunt Head Injury

Beech S. Burns, Nelly Nouboussi, Kenneth DeVane, Walker Andrews, Nathan R. Selden, Amber Lin, David Pettersson, Mubeen Jafri, David Sheridan

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Objective: To increase the percentage of patients who undergo rapid magnetic resonance imaging (rMRI) rather than computed tomography (CT) for evaluation of mild traumatic brain injury (TBI) from 45% in 2020 to 80% by December 2021. Study design: This was a quality improvement initiative targeted to patients presenting to the pediatric emergency department presenting with mild TBI, with baseline data collected from January 2020 to December 2020. From January 2021 to August 2021, we implemented a series of improvement interventions and tracked the percentage of patients undergoing neuroimaging who received rMRI as their initial study. Balancing measures included proportion of all patients with mild TBI who underwent neuroimaging of any kind, proportion of patients requiring sedation, emergency department length of stay, and percentage with clinically important TBI. Results: The utilization of rMRI increased from a baseline of 45% to a mean of 92% in the intervention period. Overall neuroimaging rates did not change significantly after the intervention (19.8 vs 23.2%, P = .24). There was no difference in need for anxiolysis (12 vs 7%, P = .30) though emergency department length of stay was marginally increased (1.4 vs 1.7 hours, P = < 0.01). Conclusion: In this quality improvement initiative, transition to rMRI as the primary imaging modality for the evaluation of minor TBI was achieved at a level 1 pediatric trauma center with no significant increase in overall use of neuroimaging.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number114099
JournalJournal of Pediatrics
Volume272
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2024

Keywords

  • diagnostic imaging
  • emergency department
  • pediatrics
  • quality improvement

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health

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