Seat-belt injuries in children involved in motor vehicle crashes.

Author(s)
Santschi, M. Echave, V. Laflamme, S. McFadden, N. & Cyr, C.
Year
Abstract

The efficacy of seat belts in reducing deaths from motor vehicle crashes is well documented. A unique association of injuries has emerged in adults and children with the use of seat belts. The "seat-belt syndrome" refers to the spectrum of injuries associated with lap-belt restraints, particularly flexion-distraction injuries to the spine (Chance fractures). The authors describe the injuries sustained by 8 children, including 2 sets of twins, in 3 different motor vehicle crashes. All children were rear seat passengers wearing lap or 3-point restraints. All had abdominal lap-belt ecchymosis and multiple abdominal injuries due to the common mechanism of seat-belt compression with hyperflexion and distraction during deceleration. Five of the children had lumbar spine fractures and 4 remained permanently paraplegic. These incidents illustrate the need for acute awareness of the complete spectrum of intra-abdominal and spinal injuries in restrained pediatric passengers in motor vehicle crashes and for rear seat restraints that include shoulder belts with the ability to adjust them to fit smaller passengers, including older children. (Author/publisher)

Request publication

1 + 0 =
Solve this simple math problem and enter the result. E.g. for 1+3, enter 4.

Publication

Library number
C 34510 [electronic version only]
Source

Canadian Journal of Surgery - Journal Canadien de Chirurgie, Vol. 48 (2005), No. 5 (October), p. 373-376, 16 ref.

Our collection

This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.