Rogers Gary F, Oh Albert K, Mulliken John B
Boston, Mass. From the Craniofacial Center, Department of Plastic Surgery, Children's Hospital, Harvard Medical School.
Plast Reconstr Surg. 2009 Feb;123(2):643-652. doi: 10.1097/PRS.0b013e318196b9be.
Numerous risk factors have been associated with the development of deformational plagiocephaly, although the etiology remains unclear. Torticollis and sternocleidomastoid imbalance are implicated, but reporting is variable. The authors sought to determine the incidence of torticollis/sternocleidomastoid imbalance in deformational plagiocephaly.
The authors prospectively evaluated 371 infants with cranial asymmetry between 2002 and 2003. Demographic data and medical history were recorded, and a questionnaire was administered. Cranial asymmetry and head rotation were assessed, and variables were statistically analyzed.
Two-hundred two patients were included. Mean age at initial evaluation was 6.1 months (range, 3 to 16 months). Sixty-eight percent (n = 138) were male; 74 percent (n = 149) were flat on the right occiput; 14 percent (n = 28) were from a multiple pregnancy (24 twins, four triplets); 27 percent (n = 54) were premature; and four percent (n = 8) were syndromic. Ninety-three percent (n = 188) of parents did not notice flattening at birth. Ninety-two percent (n = 186) recalled a preferential head position after birth, and in 95 percent of these infants (n = 177 of 186) this improved with age. Only 24 percent (n = 48) of infants had been previously diagnosed or treated for torticollis. Mean cranial asymmetry was 12.5 mm (range, 8 to 25 mm). Ninety-seven percent (n = 195) of infants had head rotational asymmetry of 15 degrees or greater, with more rotation to the flat side. The mean rotational difference was 24 degrees (range 0 to 60; SD 9.8). There was a negative correlation (p = 0.004) between age and head rotational asymmetry (i.e., younger patients exhibited greater asymmetry) and a positive correlation (p = 0.043) between cranial asymmetry and head rotational asymmetry.
The incidence of torticollis/sternocleidomastoid imbalance in deformational plagiocephaly is underreported. Because this condition improves rapidly during early infancy, the findings may be subtle and evidenced only by a history of preferential head rotation. The major cause of deformational plagiocephaly is limited head mobility in early infancy secondary to cervical imbalance.
尽管变形性斜头畸形的病因尚不清楚,但已有众多风险因素与其发生相关。斜颈和胸锁乳突肌失衡被认为与之有关,但相关报道并不一致。作者试图确定变形性斜头畸形中斜颈/胸锁乳突肌失衡的发生率。
作者在2002年至2003年间对371例有颅骨不对称的婴儿进行了前瞻性评估。记录人口统计学数据和病史,并进行问卷调查。评估颅骨不对称和头部旋转情况,并对变量进行统计学分析。
纳入202例患者。初次评估时的平均年龄为6.1个月(范围3至16个月)。68%(n = 138)为男性;74%(n = 149)右枕部扁平;14%(n = 28)来自多胎妊娠(24对双胞胎,4对三胞胎);27%(n = 54)早产;4%(n = 8)患有综合征。93%(n = 188)的家长在婴儿出生时未注意到头部扁平。92%(n = 186)的家长回忆起婴儿出生后有偏好的头部姿势,其中95%(n = 186中的177例)的婴儿随着年龄增长这种情况有所改善。只有24%(n = 48)的婴儿此前被诊断或治疗过斜颈。平均颅骨不对称度为12.5毫米(范围8至25毫米)。97%(n = 195)的婴儿头部旋转不对称度为15度或更大,且向扁平侧的旋转更多。平均旋转差异为24度(范围0至60度;标准差9.8)。年龄与头部旋转不对称之间存在负相关(p = 0.004)(即年龄较小的患者不对称度更大),颅骨不对称与头部旋转不对称之间存在正相关(p = 0.043)。
变形性斜头畸形中斜颈/胸锁乳突肌失衡的发生率报告不足。由于这种情况在婴儿早期迅速改善,其表现可能很细微,仅通过偏好的头部旋转史得以证明。变形性斜头畸形的主要原因是婴儿早期由于颈部失衡导致头部活动受限。