Child Abuse and Battered Baby Syndrome

Child Abuse and Battered Baby Syndrome

Child Abuse and Battered Baby Syndrome

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Infanticide - Neonatal Foul Play

  • Infanticide: Killing a newborn (<1 yr).
    • BNS 91: Preventing live birth or causing death post-birth.
    • BNS 92: Death of quick unborn child (culpable homicide).
    • BNS 94: Concealing birth by secret body disposal.
    • Vs. Foeticide: Killing fetus in utero.
  • Signs of Live Birth:
    • Hydrostatic Test: Lungs float if breathed. 📌 Mnemonic: Lungs Float Free if Live.

    • Wreden's Test: Air in middle ear.

    • Lecithin/Sphingomyelin (L/S) ratio > 2:1 (lung maturity).

  • Common Causes of Death:
    • Asphyxia (smothering, drowning, throttling).
    • Head injury.
    • Neglect (exposure, starvation).

⭐ Breslau's second life test (air in stomach/intestines) strongly indicates live birth, even if lungs fail hydrostatic test due to resuscitation attempts.

Child Abuse - Bruised Innocence

Child physical abuse, formerly termed "Battered Baby Syndrome," encompasses non-accidental injuries inflicted upon minors. Forensic indicators include multiple bruises in various healing stages, fractures inconsistent with developmental milestones, and abusive head trauma (AHT).

💡 Clinical Pearl: Pattern recognition is crucial - accidental injuries typically occur over bony prominences, while abuse injuries appear on soft tissues, trunk, and protected areas.

Legal framework under BNS Section 75 (child cruelty) and BNS Section 64 (grievous hurt to child) requires mandatory reporting. BNSS Section 173 mandates immediate medical examination and evidence collection.

Key Documentation: Photograph all injuries with measurement scales, document healing stages, and maintain detailed body diagrams for court proceedings under BSA provisions.

Differential diagnosis excludes bleeding disorders, metabolic bone disease, and accidental trauma through comprehensive medical evaluation and forensic pathology assessment.

Battered Baby Syndrome - Bones Don't Lie

  • Definition: Abusive Head Trauma (AHT)/Non-Accidental Injury (NAI): Severe physical abuse in infants (Caffey's Syndrome).
  • Key Injuries: Multiple fractures, varied healing stages.
    • Long bones, ribs (posterior), skull (diastatic).
    • Highly Suspicious: Metaphyseal 'corner'/'bucket-handle' fractures.
    • Fractures in non-ambulatory infants require comprehensive assessment.
  • Head: Subdural hematoma (most common intracranial), retinal hemorrhages (Shaken Baby Syndrome/AHT).
  • Skin: Patterned bruises (belt/loop marks, burns), bite marks.
  • Diagnosis: Skeletal survey with comprehensive clinical assessment is crucial.

⭐ Metaphyseal chip fractures (corner fractures or bucket-handle fractures) are highly suspicious for NAI in infants, but diagnosis requires comprehensive assessment of all clinical findings under BNS provisions for child protection.

📌 Mnemonic: SHATTERED

  • Skull #
  • Healing #
  • Abusive patterns
  • Thoracic # (posterior ribs)
  • Transverse # long bone
  • Extremity # (metaphyseal)
  • Repeated # (multiple stages)
  • Evidence documentation
  • Detailed assessment
  • Doctor's Role (Suspected Abuse):
    • History: Child (if able), caregivers (separately).
    • Exam: Thorough, child fully undressed.
    • Documentation: Meticulous (written, photos, diagrams).
  • Reporting: Mandatory under POCSO Act (Sec 19) & JJ Act 2021 to CWC/Police/SJPU with specific procedures outlined for Special Juvenile Police Unit involvement.

    ⭐ Under Sec 21 POCSO Act, failure by authority (doctors) to report child sexual abuse is punishable.

  • DDx: OI, accidental trauma, bleeding disorders, Mongolian spots, congenital syphilis, scurvy.
  • Evidence: Preserve clothing, foreign bodies; DNA swabs (sexual abuse) following BSA evidence collection protocols.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Infanticide is the unlawful killing of an infant <1 year; relevant BNS sections include provisions under child protection and homicide.
  • Child Physical Abuse/Non-Accidental Trauma features multiple non-accidental injuries in various stages of healing.
  • Abusive Head Trauma (AHT) triad: subdural hemorrhage, retinal hemorrhages, and encephalopathy.
  • Multiple fractures (especially metaphyseal, rib, skull) in different healing phases are classic in physical abuse.
  • Look for patterned bruises, cigarette burns, and torn frenulum as cutaneous signs.
  • A history inconsistent with the nature and extent of injuries is a major red flag.
  • Caffey's disease (Infantile Cortical Hyperostosis) is a key differential for multiple fractures in infants.

Practice Questions: Child Abuse and Battered Baby Syndrome

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Further investigation is essential in a newborn with which of the following conditions?

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Flashcards: Child Abuse and Battered Baby Syndrome

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Section _____ deals with preventing the child from being born alive or to cause it to die after birth

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Section _____ deals with preventing the child from being born alive or to cause it to die after birth

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