4.1 Article

Extensive Tongue Laceration in an Edentulous Infant: Is It Child Abuse?

Journal

ENT-EAR NOSE & THROAT JOURNAL
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/01455613221149803

Keywords

interdisciplinary teams; child abuse and neglect; head and neck injuries

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It is important for medical providers to differentiate accidental and abusive mechanisms of injury in children. A case of an edentulous infant sustaining a deep tongue laceration after a fall onto carpeted floor is presented, raising concern for abuse. This highlights the responsibility of healthcare professionals and a multidisciplinary team in identifying potential child abuse.
It is important for medical providers to distinguish between accidental and abusive mechanisms of injury in children. In the absence of a serious trauma, an isolated tongue laceration and oromaxillofacial trauma in a young, edentulous infant raises significant concern for abuse. The presented case demonstrates a unique injury pattern and serves as an opportunity to explore the multidisciplinary approach to infant trauma in Otolaryngology. Presented is an edentulous infant who sustained a deep splitting laceration of the oral tongue as a result of being dropped a short distance onto carpeted floor. This injury pattern, in the absence of other trauma, raised concern for abuse. Hospital social work and Child Abuse Pediatrics further investigated the matter. A surveillance camera video was produced which demonstrated the blunt force of the fall, coupled with the friction sliding on the floor, ripped open the infant's tongue and left a pattern otherwise suspicious for sharp object laceration. To our knowledge, this is the first report describing a full-thickness tongue laceration after a fall from a caregiver's arms onto carpeted ground. This case underscores the responsibility of the astute provider coupled with a multidisciplinary team to identify or rule out potential child abuse.

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