waktu aby jatuh dari tempat tidur,malah saya gak tau apa2.
taunya dari suami,itupun setelah saya nyampe rumah... =((
saya tanya2 ke suami,aby masih aktif apa gak??muntah2 apa gak??
kata suami saya,aby masih aktif,gak muntah,benjut aja ama nangis kuenceng...
(Leknya gak ngomong sama sekali ma saya..menyebalkan..)
tau2,tetangga saya dah manggil mak urut (bacanya jangan kepleset yee...).
takutnya sih aby keseleo juga...
alhamdulillah,nangisnya cuma karna dipegang orang lain..

ini ada artikel dari BA...


*HEAD INJURIES*

The skull acts as a protective helmet for the delicate brain, and the skull
is covered with a richly vascularized scalp. It is designed to withstand the
hard bumps and bruises of childhood. It helps to appreciate the difference
between a skull injury and a brain injury. Most falls involve injury to the
scalp only, which bleeds profusely if cut or forms a large swelling (goose
egg) from broken blood vessels beneath the skin. Don't be alarmed by how
quickly these large bumps appear. They go down quickly with an ice pack and
pressure. These bumps and bleeds are usually limited to a scalp injury and
seldom indicate that the underlying brain has been injured. Here are some
tips to help you get through this ordeal.

The main concern after any blow to baby's head is injury to the underlying
brain, which occurs in two forms: *bleeding *and *concussion*. When small
blood vessels have been broken between the skull and the brain or within the
brain, bleeding occurs within this space and compresses the brain. A blow to
the head may also cause a concussion, meaning the brain has been "shaken up"
by the fall. Pressure on the brain from bleeding or from the swelling
associated with the concussion produces the outward signs of a brain injury.


*WHAT TO DO WHEN YOUR CHILD BUMPS HIS HEAD*

  - *Don't panic.* Stay calm. If your child sees you remain relaxed, he
  is more likely to calm down.
  - *Ice, ice, ice!* If your child will let you, gently hold an ice pack
  (a "boo-boo bunny") to the bump (bag of frozen vegetables works great!).
  This will decrease the eventual size of the bump. Apply the ice for 20
  minutes and then take a 5-minute break, then 20 minutes again. Offer your
  child a treat to eat during the icing to consol him.
  - Many children will kick and scream if you try to apply ice. You can
  decide if it is worth it. The main benefit from ice is cosmetic appearance.
  Rarely, a large bump will leave a tiny pea-sized residual hard calcium
  deposit felt under the skin. Applying ice may help prevent this.
  - *Stop the bleeding.* The skin on the face and scalp is extremely
  rich in blood vessels. Cuts on the face and scalp will bleed much more than
  other areas of the body. Simply apply gentle pressure to the cut using a
  cloth (may have ice inside it). The bleeding will stop with time. Children
  virtually never lose too much blood from a cut or bump, even though it may
  seem like a lot.
  - If there is a cut over the bump, wait for the bleeding to stop, then
  examine in closely. Click here on Cuts, Scrapes &
Stitches<http://www.askdrsears.com/html/8/T085600.asp>to help you
decide if it needs stitches.
  - *Acetaminophen*. When your child has calmed down, you may want to
  give a dose to relieve the headache that might start. Click on
  Acetaminophen <http://www.askdrsears.com/html/8/T089101.asp> for
  dosing.
  - You need to observe your child's mental status as explained below.
  Try to keep him awake for at least an hour. After that, you can allow him to
  take short naps, but no more than 20 minutes without observing him.
  - *Observe your child.* If your child is alert and conscious, walking,
  talking, playing, and acting like she was before the fall, administer a dose
  of parental sympathy, apply an ice pack to the cut or bump for twenty
  minutes, and begin a period of observation before calling your doctor. The
  reason for the period of observation is because doctors often rely more on
  how the child behaves after the injury than what happened at the time of the
  injury. If the brain has been injured, signs may show immediately, or they
  may appear slowly during the next twenty-four hours. After the period of
  observation, depending on your baby's condition, you may or may not wish to
  call the doctor. Besides any when-to-call-the-doctor list there is an
  overriding inner voice. Trust this monitoring system as much as the most
  sophisticated electronics. If it tells you something's not quite right, call
  your doctor to report baby's condition, seek advice, and above all tell the
  doctor why you are concerned.

*WHEN TO WORRY*

Bumps on the head, even large ones, don't always warrant a trip to the ER or
even a call to your doctor. However a hard hit may shake up the brain –
called a concussion, also blood can slowly leak out from a damaged blood
vessel beneath the skull, called a hematoma that push into the brain tissue.
A small hematoma is not dangerous, but larger ones can push into the brain
tissue. This can either happen very quickly within an hour, or it can take
two or three days. This is an emergency and requires a CAT scan of the head
to diagnose. Remember, considering the many times children hit their head,
injury to the brain is unusual. Most bumps on the head, even large ones, are
not serious. Here are some signs to watch for that warrant a call to the
doctor or the ER immediately:

  - *Loss of consciousness.* If your child blacks out, even for a few
  seconds, this can mean that the force of the bump was strong enough to cause
  a hematoma. A reassuring sign is that you either hear or see your child
  start to cry immediately after the bump. This means he did not lose
  consciousness. If your child is unconscious, but breathing and pink (no blue
  lips), lay her on a flat surface and call emergency medical services. If you
  have cause to suspect a neck injury, don't move the child but let the
  trained experts in neck injuries transport her. If she is not breathing,
  apply CPR, or if she's having a convulsion, keep her airway clear.
  Sometimes, if baby is sensitive and prone to temper tantrums, she may be
  pushed into a breath-holding spell, which could be mistaken for a
  convulsion. This scene naturally pushes panic buttons and gets baby rushed
  to the hospital. Even if this turns out to be unnecessary, it is better to
  be safe. When in doubt, take baby and sit in the waiting room of the local
  hospital emergency room.
  - *Vomiting.* Many children will vomit once or twice after a big bump
  on the head, either from crying, coughing and gagging, or just from the
  shock to the skull. This is expected. However, if your child vomits three or
  more times, he should be looked at in the ER. As a precaution feed the
  recovering faller clear liquids for a few hours. Breastfeeding is
  therapeutic.
  - *Altered mental status.* This means that your child won't focus on
  you, look you in the eyes, or respond to questions or commands. Fighting you
  when you try to apply ice are actually goods signs that he is okay.
  - *Loss of balance while walking.* Many children may complain of
  dizziness. This is expected. But if your child actually loses is balance and
  repeatedly falls over while walking, he needs to see a doctor. Watch your
  child's normal play. Is he doing everything the same after the fall: sitting
  straight, walking well, moving arms and legs normally? Or is he off balance,
  wobbly, dragging a leg, or becoming increasingly disoriented? In the pre-
  walker, do you notice any change in sitting or crawling skills or in
  manipulative hand skills
  - *Prolonged crying.* If an infant continues to cry inconsolably for
  more than an hour after a good dose of acetaminophen, he should probably see
  a doctor.
  - *Severe headache.* If a child continues to complain of a very severe
  headache you should consult a doctor immediately.
  - *Eye signs.* The eyes mirror what's going on inside the body,
  especially inside the brain. In fact, the back of the eye is so intimately
  connected with the brain that your doctor looks at the backs of the eyes for
  evidence of brain swelling while examining a child following a head injury.
  A child's signs are more difficult to assess, but here are the call-doctor
  cues:
     - Crossed eyes or rolling eyes
     - One pupil larger than the other
     - Behavior such as tripping or running into things that
     indicates baby's vision is diminished
     - In the older child, add complaints of seeing double and
     blurred vision to the worry list
  - *When in doubt always seek medical attention.*

*WHAT TO LOOK FOR OVER THE NEXT 12-24 HOURS*

*Check your child frequently for any of the above signs. Also check for:*

*Changes in baby's sleep behavior.* Babies normally retreat into sleep after
trauma, which makes the usual admonition to "watch for a change in
consciousness" an anxiety-producing instruction for the parent. If a head
injury occurs near night or nap time in an already tired child, you may be
confused about whether the drowsiness is due to the injury or whether it's
just time for sleep to naturally overtake the child. And it may be
impossible to follow the advice "Don't let baby go to sleep." Let baby fall
asleep, but awaken yourself every two hours and do a baby check. This is
what to look for:

  - *Change in color.* From pink to pale or, even more alarming, blue.
  - *Change in breathing.* Periods of very shallow breathing, ten-to
  twenty-second periods of stop-breathing episodes followed by irregular
  breathing, or gasping episodes (remember that newborns normally have
  irregular breathing).
  - *Twitches.* On one side of the body involving a whole limb.

If baby's color and breathing patterns are normal (no change from usual) and
your parental instincts sense nothing's wrong, there's no need to awaken
baby unless advised to do so by you doctor. The deep sleep from a head
injury is nearly always associated with *shallow, irregular breathing
patterns* that you are unlikely to have seen before.

If, however, you are uncertain or child's appearance sets off a "not normal"
alarm, do a partial arousal. Sit or stand your child up and then put her
back down. Normally, a child will fuss a bit and thrash around in the bed to
resettle. If your child does not act like this, try to fully arouse her by
sitting or standing her up, opening her eyes, and calling her name. If she
awakens, looks at you, fusses or smiles, and struggles to be left
undisturbed, you can go back to sleep without worrying. If, on the other
hand, she does not protest, can't be awakened enough to begin fussing, is
pale, shows irregular breathing, and is drooling profusely, or shows any of
the signs of brain injury listed above, seek medical attention immediately.

*SHOULD I WAKE MY CHILD UP DURING THE NIGHT?*

While it's standard advice to awaken the child frequently after a head
injury, in practice this advice is confusing. Children normally retreat into
sleep after any upset. In fact, because of new insights into the management
of head injuries it is no longer standard practice for an ER physician to
advise waking a child up, if the ER physician has thoroughly examined the
child and found no evidence of internal injury. Studies of children seen in
an ER for a head injury show that if a child has a normal neurological exam
and normal CAT scan there is very low risk of that child deteriorating and
therefore it is not necessary to wake that child up. A more practical
approach is to observe a change in your child's color and breathing
patterns. If your child looks pale and shows very irregular or very shallow
breathing that is very different from his usual patterns awaken him for a
more complete evaluation. Your doctor will advise you whether or not to
awaken your child.

*WHAT ABOUT SKULL X-RAYS?*

Except for severe head injuries or obvious fractures, skull x-rays are
seldom helpful; nor is it necessary to rush a happily playing child to the
hospital for an x-ray. First, try a period of observation; next, call your
doctor; then comes the advice on whether or not to take baby to the hospital
for x-rays. A CAT scan, a series of cross-sectional x-rays of the brain, has
nearly replaced the plain skull x-ray. In most cases if a child warrants an
x-ray at all, he merits a CAT scan. This technological breakthrough reveals
much more about an injury, such as whether there is bleeding or swelling of
the brain, than a simple skull x-ray. On a softer note: In the life of a
child, considering the many times little heads meet hard floors, injuries to
the brain are uncommon.

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