Shaken baby syndrome
| Shaken baby syndrome | |
|---|---|
| Other names | Abusive head trauma, non-accidental head injury, non-accidental trauma | 
| An intraparenchymal bleed with overlying skull fracture from shaken baby syndrome | |
| Specialty | Pediatrics | 
| Symptoms | Variable | 
| Complications | Seizures, visual impairment, cerebral palsy, cognitive impairment | 
| Usual onset | Less than 5 years old | 
| Causes | Disputed, proponents argue blunt trauma and vigorous shaking | 
| Frequency | 3 per 10,000 babies per year (US) | 
| Deaths | ≈25% risk of death | 
Shaken baby syndrome (SBS), also known as abusive head trauma (AHT), is a controversial and scientifically disputed medical condition in children younger than five years old, hypothesized to be caused by blunt trauma, vigorous shaking, or a combination of both.
According to literature, the condition is caused by violent shaking with or without blunt impact that can lead to long-term health consequences for infants or children. Diagnosis can be difficult, but is generally characterized by the "triad" of findings: retinal hemorrhage, encephalopathy, and subdural hematoma. A CT scan of the head is typically recommended if a concern is present. If there are concerning findings on the CT scan, a full work-up for child abuse often occurs, including an eye exam and skeletal survey. Retinal hemorrhage is highly associated with AHT, occurring in 78% of cases of AHT versus 5% of cases of non-abusive head trauma, although such findings rely on contested methodology. A 2023 review concluded "research has shown the triad is not sufficient to infer shaking or abuse and the shaking hypothesis does not meet the standards of evidence based medicine", and argued the symptoms may arise from naturally occurring retinal haemorrhage.
The concept is controversial in child abuse pediatrics, with critics arguing it is an unproven hypothesis that has little diagnostic accuracy. Diagnosis has proven to be both challenging and contentious for medical professionals because objective witnesses to the initial trauma are generally unavailable, and when independent witnesses to shaking are available, the associated injuries are less likely to occur. This is said to be particularly problematic when the trauma is deemed 'non-accidental.' Some medical professionals propose that SBS is the result of respiratory abnormalities leading to hypoxia and swelling of the brain. Symptoms of SBS may also be non specific markers of the degree of intracranial pathology. The courtroom has become a forum for conflicting theories with which generally accepted medical literature has not been reconciled. There are often no outwardly visible signs of trauma, despite the presence of severe internal brain and eye injury.
According to proponents, SBS is the leading cause of fatal head injuries in children under two, with a risk of death of about 25%. This figure has been criticized for circular reasoning, selection bias and that violent shaking very rarely causes serious injury. The most common symptoms are said to be retinal bleeds, multiple fractures of the long bones, and subdural hematomas (bleeding in the brain). Educating new parents appears to be beneficial in decreasing rates of the condition, although other studies have shown that education does not change rates. SBS is estimated to occur in three to four per 10,000 babies per year.
One source states retinal hemorrhage (bleeding) occurs in around 85% of SBS cases and the severity of retinal hemorrhage correlates with severity of head injury. Others contend this is based on circular reasoning and selection bias. RHs are very rare when infants are actually witnessed to have been shaken. The type of retinal bleeds are often believed to be particularly characteristic of this condition, making the finding useful in establishing the diagnosis, although again such patterns are not found when shaking is independently witnessed, and is almost certainly due to selection bias.
Infants may display irritability, failure to thrive, alterations in eating patterns, lethargy, vomiting, seizures, bulging or tense fontanelles (the soft spots on a baby's head), increased size of the head, altered breathing, and dilated pupils, although all these clinical findings are generic and are known to have a range of causes, with shaking certainly not the most common cause of any of them. Complications include seizures, visual impairment, hearing loss, epilepsy, cerebral palsy, cognitive impairment, cardiac arrest, coma, and death.