Described supervision in 142 child pedestrian injuries (PI), based on presence and proximity of supervisors and/or peers. Children (5-12 years), families, sites, and PI events were described via record reviews, interviews, questionnaires, and site investigation. Supervision of PI victims varied with family size and cohesion, and with children's age, self-help skills, nearness to home, and activity (playing or journey). Peer presence was associated with more impulsive behavior among supervised (but not among unsupervised) PI victims. Definitions of supervision parameters offered here can aid research on the complex relationship between supervision and PI risk.
Objective: Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) production rates influence shunt design and the care of children with hydrocephalus. Measurement of hourly CSF output through external ventricular drainage (EVD) reflects the CSF production. In the present study, hourly CSF outputs in children with hydrocephalus were measured while they were treated with EVD and correlated with the age, sex and body weight of the patients as well as other clinical parameters. Methods: One hundred children with hydrocephalus due to various causes had EVD treatment. Twenty-six had EVD on two or three separate occasions; thus, the CSF output measurements were observed and analyzed on the basis of 130 EVDs. The most common reason for EVD treatment was shunt infection (n = 75). The duration of EVDs ranged from 25 to 774 h (mean 269 h). The height of the drip chamber from the mid-head position ranged from 0 to 23 cm (mean 9.8 cm). The hourly CSF output was analyzed according to the patient’s age, sex and body weight as well as the presence of CSF infection. Results: The hourly CSF output rapidly increases during the first year of life. By the second year, it reaches 64% of the hourly CSF output of 15-year-old children. The mean hourly output ranged from 0.1 to 26.5 ml/h (mean 8.1 ml/h), with the standard deviation ranging from 0.4 to 10.8 ml/h (mean 5.2 ml/h). A regression analysis indicated that the age and body weight appeared to correlate with the hourly CSF output. Using the natural logarithm of age, body weight and sex, these predictors accounted for 50.9% of the variability in hourly CSF output. The regression equation is as follows: hourly CSF output = 2.78 – 2.23(male = 0, female = 1) + 0.97 log(age in years) + 2.26 log(body weight in kg). R sd = 3.36, R2 = 0.509. The type of infecting organism and the height of EVD did not influence the overall CSF output. Conclusion: The hourly CSF output fluctuates, but the CSF output increases logarithmically with age and body weight. The gender also influences the CSF output, with males having a greater output than females. The data produced by the present study will help us to understand CSF production rates in developing children. They will also help us in the care of children receiving EVD treatment, as well as in selecting and designing shunt systems.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.