Gabrick Kyle S, Wu Robin T, Singh Anusha, Bartlett Scott P, Taylor Jesse A, Persing John A, Alperovich Michael
Yale School of Medicine, Section of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, New Haven, CT.
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Philadelphia, PA.
J Craniofac Surg. 2020 Jun;31(4):1000-1005. doi: 10.1097/SCS.0000000000006355.
Despite surgical correction of unilateral craniosynostosis (ULC), complex cranial base angulation can result in partial reversion to preoperative deformity with growth and time. Using 3-dimensional imaging, dysmorphic facial features of ULC in school-age patients were quantified and related to how they contribute to overall facial asymmetry and patient-reported outcomes.
Children who underwent surgical correction of ULC were recruited from Yale University and Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. The 3D photographs were analyzed utilizing a Procrustes analysis of shape. Pearson's correlation was used to determine dysmorphic features' impact on overall asymmetry. Patients were stratified into "moderate" and "severe" asymmetry. Finally, asymmetry was correlated to patient-reported outcome scores. Statistical analysis was performed with SPSS-25 with P < 0.05 as statistically significant.
Twenty-one patients were included with average age at analysis of 12.3 years. Fifty-seven percent of patients had right-sided fusion. The overall Procrustes analysis indicated a root mean square difference of 2.21 mm. Pearson's correlation indicated that the facial middle 3rd (P ≤ 0.001), orbital dystopia (P < 0.001), chin point deviation (P = 0.011), and nasal root angulation (P = 0.019) contributed most to overall asymmetry. Patients in the severe asymmetry cohort had greater facial middle-third asymmetry (P < 0.001) and orbital dystopia (P < 0.001). Asymmetry did not correlate with patient-reported outcomes.
Patients with ULC have persistent facial asymmetry at school-age with the greatest levels of asymmetry in the facial middle-third, orbit, and nasal root. Beyond the cranial dysmorphology, initial skull base angulation in unilateral coronal craniosynostosis manifests in long-term mid and lower-third facial asymmetry.
尽管对单侧颅缝早闭(ULC)进行了手术矫正,但复杂的颅底成角可能会随着生长和时间的推移部分恢复到术前畸形状态。利用三维成像技术,对学龄期患者ULC的面部畸形特征进行了量化,并分析了这些特征对整体面部不对称和患者报告结局的影响。
从耶鲁大学和费城儿童医院招募接受ULC手术矫正的儿童。利用普氏形状分析对三维照片进行分析。采用Pearson相关性分析来确定畸形特征对整体不对称的影响。将患者分为“中度”和“重度”不对称两组。最后,将不对称程度与患者报告的结局评分进行相关性分析。使用SPSS-25进行统计分析,P<0.05为具有统计学意义。
纳入21例患者,分析时的平均年龄为12.3岁。57%的患者为右侧融合。整体普氏分析显示均方根差为2.21mm。Pearson相关性分析表明,面部中三分之一(P≤0.001)、眼眶异位(P<0.001)、颏点偏移(P=0.011)和鼻根成角(P=0.019)对整体不对称的影响最大。重度不对称组患者的面部中三分之一不对称(P<0.001)和眼眶异位(P<0.001)更为明显。不对称程度与患者报告的结局无关。
ULC患者在学龄期存在持续性面部不对称,面部中三分之一、眼眶和鼻根的不对称程度最高。除了颅骨畸形外,单侧冠状缝颅缝早闭初始的颅底成角在长期会表现为面中下部不对称。