Challenger Medical Education Blog

Most Missed Question in EM Exam Prep – Pediatric Dog Bite

Written by Challenger Corporation | Feb 19, 2026 6:41:09 PM

For scalp bite wounds in children <2 years where deeper injury is hard to assess, head CT is the exam-favored next step to rule out skull fracture/penetration before closure.

 

Question - Next Step for Dog Bite

An 18-month-old girl is brought in to see you by her parents after she was attacked by a neighbor’s dog and sustained a bite wound to the scalp. On examination, she is awake and crying, with partial avulsion of the scalp and puncture wounds that are not actively bleeding. Her tetanus immunization is up to date

Which of the following is the best NEXT step in the management of this patient's condition?

Answer Options:

A. irrigation and primary closure of the wounds
B. computed tomography (CT) of the head
C. irrigation and debridement of the wounds
D. transcranial ultrasonography

 

This is a young child (<2 years) with a scalp dog bite involving puncture wounds and partial avulsion. In this age group, skull penetration/open or depressed fracture and intracranial injury can be present despite a deceptively limited external exam, because soft tissues and hair obscure assessment and the calvarium is thinner. The management priority is therefore to exclude open/depressed skull fracture or penetrating injury before proceeding with closure or bedside-only wound management.

Contemporary head injury guidance (e.g., NICE Head Injury guideline NG232, 2023) supports urgent CT imaging in children when there is concern for suspected open or depressed skull fracture or penetrating injury. Similarly, ACR Appropriateness Criteria: Head Trauma—Child (2020) supports CT when there is clinical suspicion of skull fracture/penetration. While dog bites aren’t the classic “blunt head injury” population, the same principle applies: if penetration/open fracture is on the table, image first.

After CT excludes intracranial extension or skull fracture, the next steps typically include copious irrigation, selective debridement, consideration of primary closure for cosmetically important facial/scalp wounds when appropriate, antibiotic prophylaxis (commonly amoxicillin-clavulanate), and surgical consultation if deeper injury is present.

 

Why This Emergency Medicine Question Is Often Missed

  • Test-takers treat this as a “routine dog bite” question and jump to irrigation/closure/antibiotics without addressing occult intracranial injury risk in infants.
  • Many candidates overapply blunt head trauma rules and underestimate penetrating mechanisms (puncture wounds).
  • The phrase “awake and crying” misleadingly reassures, but normal mental status doesn’t exclude skull fracture/penetration.

 

What the Distractors Indicate

Option What It Tests / Implies Why It’s Wrong Here
irrigation and primary closure of the wounds  Standard dog-bite wound care and cosmesis  Premature before ruling out **open/depressed fracture or intracranial penetration** in a high-risk age/mechanism scenario. 
computed tomography (CT) of the head  Prioritizing evaluation for skull fracture/penetration Correct: CT is the best next step when deeper injury can’t be safely excluded on exam in a toddler with puncture/avulsion scalp bite. 
irrigation and debridement of the wounds  Basic wound care  Necessary eventually, but still secondary to excluding intracranial injury when penetration/fracture is plausible. 
transcranial ultrasonography Non-ionizing imaging idea for infants   Not the standard test to evaluate **skull fracture/penetrating intracranial injury** in this setting; CT is faster and definitive for bone/air/foreign body concerns.

 

High-Yield Pearl for ABEM Exam Prep

In children **<2 years** with **scalp bite punctures/avulsion**, think **occult skull fracture/penetration**—**CT head before closure** is the exam-safe move.

 

Core Learning Objectives

  1. Identify when pediatric scalp bite wounds warrant CT head to evaluate for skull fracture or intracranial penetration.
  2. Sequence initial management of pediatric dog bites by prioritizing life-/limb-threatening and deep-structure injuries before definitive wound repair.

 

The Exam Trick at Play

The stem tempts you into “dog bite = irrigate + antibiotics + close (sometimes)” thinking. Boards often invert the order: when the wound location/mechanism suggests **hidden deep injury** (here, infant scalp punctures/avulsion), the “next step” is **diagnostic confirmation (CT)** before you do the satisfying procedural choices.

 

 

Additional Practice Questions & Remediation for Pediatric Scalp Bite / Head Trauma Imaging 

Emergency Medicine Practice Question 1 — “Scalp puncture, preverbal”

A 14-month-old has two small puncture wounds to the parietal scalp after a dog bite. He is consolable, neurologically normal, and the exam is limited by swelling and hair. Next best step?

  • A. Discharge with amoxicillin-clavulanate only
  • B. Noncontrast CT head
  • C. Primary closure without imaging
  • D. Transcranial ultrasound
  • E. Observe 6 hours, then discharge if stable

Emergency Medicine Practice Question 2 —  “Obvious skull defect” 

A 20-month-old is bitten on the scalp. You palpate a step-off with visible bone. Best next step?

  • A. CT head and urgent neurosurgical consultation
  • B. Irrigation and primary closure in the ED
  • C. Pressure dressing and discharge
  • D. Plain skull radiographs only
  • E. Bedside ultrasound for fracture

Emergency Medicine Practice Question 3 —  “Low-risk superficial laceration” 

A 6-year-old sustains a superficial scalp laceration from a vaccinated family dog. No punctures, no avulsion, normal neuro exam, wound fully visualized to galea without deeper extension. Next step? 

  • A. CT head
  • B. Copious irrigation and consider primary closure
  • C. MRI brain
  • D. Transcranial ultrasound
  • E. No cleaning needed; bandage only

Emergency Medicine Practice Question 4 —  “Antibiotic choice” 

A 2-year-old has a dog bite to the scalp. CT is negative for fracture/penetration, and the wound will be closed. Best prophylactic antibiotic?

  • A. Cephalexin
  • B. Amoxicillin-clavulanate
  • C. TMP-SMX alone
  • D. Azithromycin
  • E. Metronidazole alone

Emergency Medicine Practice Question 5 —  “Rabies decision” 

A toddler is bitten on the scalp by a stray dog that cannot be captured for observation. Tetanus is up to date. Next step regarding rabies?

  • A. No rabies prophylaxis needed in the US
  • B. Begin rabies post-exposure prophylaxis (immune globulin + vaccine series) after wound care
  • C. Vaccine only; no immune globulin
  • D. Immune globulin only; no vaccine
  • E. Wait 10 days to see if the dog gets sick

 

Mini Case Discussion Prompt

How would your management differ between (1) a fully visualized superficial scalp laceration in a 7-year-old and (2) puncture scalp wounds with swelling in a 14-month-old—specifically regarding imaging, closure strategy, and consultation? 

 

Mini-FAQ 

  • Q1: Why does age <2 years change the imaging threshold for scalp bites?*

A1: Exams like ABEM/EM boards expect you to recognize that infants/toddlers have thinner calvaria and less reliable exams, so puncture bites can hide skull fracture/penetration—CT becomes the safer next step.

  • Q2: Would observation alone ever be acceptable for this stem?*

A2: Not when there’s plausible penetrating injury/open fracture risk. Observation strategies are primarily for low-risk blunt head trauma, not unclear-depth puncture wounds.

  • Q3: Why not use ultrasound to look for skull fracture?*

A3: While ultrasound may detect some skull fractures in select settings, boards typically consider CT the definitive test when ruling out open/depressed fracture or intracranial injury is essential.

  • Q4: After a negative CT, is primary closure acceptable for scalp dog bites?*

A4: Often yes when the wound is clean/irrigated and there’s no deep-structure involvement; the scalp is highly vascular and tends to heal well—this is commonly tested as “closure can be considered” once deeper injury is excluded.

Find this and other Emergency Medicine exam prep questions in Med-Challenger Emergency Medicine Review with CME

Try for free and save. Ace your exams and meet your CME/MOC requirements for just $35 a month!

No matter your program, no matter the size, Med-Challenger for Groups and Institutions can better prepare your program or group, fulfill industry requirements, and increase test scores.

For personal medical education that includes board's prep, MOC, and CME requirements, Med-Challenger has you covered in Family Medicine, Emergency Medicine, Internal Medicine, Pediatrics, Pediatric Emergency Medicine, OBGYNPhysician Assistants, and Nurse Practitioners.

 
Never miss a thing. Subscribe to our blog and save!