Pogliani L, Zuccotti G V, Furlanetto M, Giudici V, Erbetta A, Chiapparini L, Valentini L
Department of Paediatrics, University of Milan, Luigi Sacco Hospital, Via GB Grassi 74, Milan, Italy.
Department of Pediatrics, University of Milan, Milan Children's Hospital V. Buzzi, Milan, Italy.
Childs Nerv Syst. 2017 Sep;33(9):1545-1552. doi: 10.1007/s00381-017-3449-3. Epub 2017 Jun 3.
Skull radiography (SR) and Computed Tomography (CT) are still proposed as the first-line imaging choice for the diagnosis of craniosynostosis (CS) in children with abnormal head shape, but both techniques expose infants to ionizing radiation. Several studies shown that ultrasound may play an important role in the diagnosis of craniosynostosis. The aim of our study is to assess the diagnostic accuracy of cranial ultrasound scan (CUS) and confirm if it is a reliable first step imaging evaluation for the diagnosis of craniosynostosis in newborn.
A cohort of 196 infants (122/74 males/females), with a mean age of 4 months, clinically suspected to have abnormal closure of cranial sutures, were firstly examined by CUS and then referred to neuroradiologists to perform volumetric CT scan if the suspicion of stenosis was ecographically confirmed; otherwise, a routine follow-up and physical treatment was performed, to observe the evolution of the head shape.
Of the 196 children studied by CUS, only two had inconclusive studies due to age limitation (>12 months). Thirty children were diagnosed with cranial synostosis at CUS and verified by CT; all the CUS results were confirmed, except two cases, that were revealed as false positives in the starting phase of the study. Twelve patients with very prominent head deformity and negative CUS underwent CT, which confirmed the CUS results in all of them; one case of closure of both temporal sutures, not studied by CUS, was documented by CT. All the 148 children with poor clinical suspicion and negative CUS underwent just a prolonged clinical follow-up. In all of them, a progressive normalization of head shape was observed, and the craniosynostosis was excluded on a clinical base.
CUS is a highly specific and sensitive imaging technique. In referral centers, expert hands can use it as a reliable first-step screening for infants younger than 1 year, suspected to have a craniosynostosis, thus avoiding unnecessary exposure to ionizing radiation. The "golden age" to obtain the best CUS results is under 6 months of life. Because the method is operator-dependent and there is a learning curve, a case centralization is advisable.
颅骨X线摄影(SR)和计算机断层扫描(CT)仍被推荐作为头部形状异常儿童颅缝早闭(CS)诊断的一线影像学选择,但这两种技术都会使婴儿暴露于电离辐射中。多项研究表明,超声可能在颅缝早闭的诊断中发挥重要作用。我们研究的目的是评估头颅超声扫描(CUS)的诊断准确性,并确认其是否是新生儿颅缝早闭诊断的可靠的第一步影像学评估方法。
对196名平均年龄为4个月、临床怀疑颅缝闭合异常的婴儿(男122例/女74例)进行研究,首先进行CUS检查,如果超声检查证实怀疑有狭窄,则转诊至神经放射科医生处进行容积CT扫描;否则,进行常规随访和物理治疗,观察头部形状的演变。
在196名接受CUS检查的儿童中,只有2名因年龄限制(>12个月)检查结果不确定。30名儿童在CUS检查中被诊断为颅缝早闭,并经CT证实;除2例在研究初期被发现为假阳性外,所有CUS检查结果均得到证实。12名头畸形非常明显且CUS检查结果为阴性的患者接受了CT检查,CT证实了所有患者的CUS检查结果;1例双侧颞缝闭合病例未接受CUS检查,但CT记录了该情况。148名临床怀疑度低且CUS检查结果为阴性的儿童仅接受了延长的临床随访。在所有这些儿童中,均观察到头部形状逐渐恢复正常,并在临床基础上排除了颅缝早闭。
CUS是一种高度特异和敏感的影像学技术。在转诊中心,经验丰富的医生可将其作为疑似颅缝早闭的1岁以下婴儿可靠的第一步筛查方法,从而避免不必要的电离辐射暴露。获得最佳CUS检查结果的“黄金年龄”是在6个月以下。由于该方法依赖操作者,且存在学习曲线,建议病例集中化。