Beaten to Blindness: Battered Baby Syndrome

Autor: Nishanth V.S., Niranjanaa, N.M., Soma Ram Reddy, Naga Mohan Rao, B. V., Sudha R., Gollapudi Sridevi Naga Rajeswari, Boddepalli Devaraj, Kattamreddy Ananth Rupesh
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2024
Předmět:
Zdroj: National Board of Examinations Journal of Medical Sciences, Vol Volume 2, Iss Issue 7, Pp 743-751 (2024)
Druh dokumentu: article
ISSN: 2583-7524
DOI: 10.61770/NBEJMS.2024.v02.i07.011
Popis: Introduction: A battered child is one who sustains repetitive physical injuries due to non-accidental violence inflicted by a parent or guardian. Child abuse encompasses behaviors exposing the child to various forms of physical or sexual abuse, neglect, or emotional misconduct. Typically, battered child syndrome is diagnosed through a disparity between the history provided by the child's caregivers and the findings of clinical examination. Case details: An 18-month-old girl child was admitted to a tertiary care hospital, presenting with a four-day history of fever, vomiting for two days and a seizure episode. The child had a history of head injury one week ago, resulting in transient unconsciousness. Upon examination, multiple healed and fresh injuries were observed on the face, hands, and right thigh. CT brain revealed hypodensity areas with a mildly displaced fracture of the left frontal bone. Fundus examination identified bilateral multiple intraretinal hemorrhages and papilledema. X-ray showed a fracture of the right proximal tibia. The child required ventilator support during the hospital stay, and subsequently, developed retinal blindness. The child was managed accordingly. Discussion: The classical feature of Battered Baby Syndrome is the discrepancy between the nature of injuries and the history provided, and the delay between the injury and medical attention. The parental risk factors for child abuse are poverty, social isolation, drug addiction, violent environment, family history of abuse, communication skills deficit and the child related risk factors are children with special needs, children with behavior problems, bonding deficit. etc. Conclusion: The current case sheds light on the unfortunate prevalence of this condition within the Indian context, urging point-of-care health providers to stay vigilant and informed about child abuse patterns in the community. It serves as a crucial reminder of the responsibility we all share in safeguarding the well-being of children.
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