Objective: Suspected skull fractures in the neonate are uncommon and present a management dilemma. We hypothesized that skull fractures are more common than reported in the literature and that few infants require any intervention.
Study design: We retrospectively reviewed the charts of 21 infants referred to our level IV Neonatal Intensive Care Unit for possible skull fracture over a 3-year period after birth trauma, suspicious findings on clinical exam, or accidental falls in the birth hospital.
Results: Skull films at the birth hospital were unreliable for fracture in 23% of cases. Seven of nine infants with accidental falls had fracture on computed tomography scan. Only three infants required neurosurgical intervention, all after severe birth trauma associated with instrumentation.
Conclusion: Skull fractures are more common than previously reported in neonates after accidental falls, but few infants with skull fractures require neurosurgical intervention.