This is the VOA Special English Health Report.
A concussion happens when the brain is
shaken, often in a car crash or a fall or a strike to the head in sports. Concussions
can be mild, but doctors may order a CT scan to look for a more serious injury.
Computed tomography provides a detailed image of the brain. But a recent study warned
that more children than necessary are being exposed to radiation this way.
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| A doctor looks at a CT brain scan at Children's National Medical Center in Washington |
A
national team led by two doctors at the University of California, Davis, studied
hospital records from thousands of children with head injuries. They found that
in many cases, the risk of developing cancer from the radiation outweighed the
risk of a serious brain injury. The study found that one in five
children over age two had a low risk of serious injury but received CT scans
anyway. The same was true of almost one
in four children under two years of age.
The researchers have developed rules to predict if a
head injury is serious enough for a scan. For children under two, doctors are
advised against it if there is:
- Normal mental activity.
- No swelling in the back
of the head.
- No feeling of a broken bone in the skull.
- And no loss of
consciousness for more than five seconds.
Doctors should also consider how the
child was injured and whether the parents say the child is acting normally.
For
patients from two to eighteen, the guidelines are similar -- except there
should be no loss of consciousness, no vomiting and no severe headache.
The
report appears in the Lancet medical journal.
Earlier
this year, the British Journal of Sports Medicine published new guidelines for concussions
in children and teens. International experts said they should not return to
sports or school until fully recovered. The brain also needs a "cognitive
rest," they say, by restricting activities like video games, texting and
watching TV.
Young
people often take longer than adults to recover from a concussion. The experts say
individual progress and not a set time period should always guide a decision to
return to play.
More than one million cases of concussion are reported
each year in the United States alone.
A
congressional committee has called a hearing Wednesday to discuss legal issues related
to head injuries in football. Recently there have been concerns about players
retired from the National Football League. But professionals are not the only
ones getting concussions. There are high school players who have died from
brain injuries.
And that's the VOA Special English
Health Report, written by Caty Weaver. I'm Steve Ember.