Divisions of1Plastic Surgery and.
2Pediatric Neurosurgery, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio.
Neurosurg Focus. 2021 Apr;50(4):E6. doi: 10.3171/2021.1.FOCUS201024.
Patients presenting with head shape changes phenotypical for craniosynostosis may have incomplete fusion of the involved sutures. The surgical literature is lacking in appropriate management strategies for these patients. In this paper, the authors evaluate their experience with a novel treatment strategy: suturectomy of only the fused portion followed by helmeting therapy in patients with skull deformity secondary to incomplete suture synostosis.
Patients with craniosynostosis with incomplete suture fusion requiring operative intervention between 2018 and 2020 were included for evaluation. Patients were selected for partial suturectomy if the patent portion of the suture had a normal appearance. All patients underwent craniectomy of the involved portion of the synostosed suture. Intraoperative ultrasound was used to reassess the degree of fusion at the time of surgery and incision planning. A 2- to 3-cm strip craniectomy was performed under direct visualization through a single minimal access incision. Postoperative helmeting was utilized for all patients. Demographic and perioperative data were collected, including laser scan data in the form of cranial index (CI) and cranial vault asymmetry (CVA), defined as the difference between two diagonal measurements, from the frontozygomaticus to the opposite eurion.
Four males and 1 female with a mean age of 2.8 months (range 1.1-3.9 months) at presentation were included. All patients had incomplete sagittal synostosis (one patient also had an incomplete left lambdoid synostosis and another had an incomplete left coronal synostosis). The mean age at surgery was 3.5 months (range 2.0-4.7 months) without any major complications. All patients were compliant with postoperative helmeting. The average age at the last follow-up was 12.8 months (range 5.3-23.7 months) with a mean follow-up duration of 9.3 months (range 0.5-19.6 months). Final laser scan evaluations were available for 3 patients and showed an improvement of the CI from an average of 71.3 (range 70-73) to 84.3 (range 82-86). The CVA improved from an average of 9.67 mm (range 2-22 mm) to 1.67 mm (range 1-2 mm).
Minimally invasive direct excision of the involved portion of fused cranial sutures followed by helmet therapy for phenotypical craniosynostosis is a safe and effective treatment strategy. This technique is suitable for very young patients and appears to offer similar outcomes to complete suturectomy. Further studies are required to see if this approach reduces the deformity severity for patients requiring vault remodeling later in life.
表现出头颅形状改变特征的颅缝早闭患者可能存在受累骨缝融合不完全。外科文献中缺乏针对这些患者的适当治疗策略。本文作者评估了他们对一种新治疗策略的经验:对继发于不完全骨缝融合的颅骨畸形患者,仅切除融合部分的骨缝,然后进行头盔治疗。
纳入 2018 年至 2020 年期间需要手术干预的颅缝早闭且不完全融合的患者进行评估。如果骨缝的未融合部分外观正常,则选择部分切除骨缝。所有患者均行受累骨缝的颅缝切除术。术中超声用于评估手术时和切口规划时的融合程度。在单一切口下通过直接可视化进行 2-3cm 条状颅骨切除术。所有患者均采用头盔治疗。收集了人口统计学和围手术期数据,包括颅骨指数(CI)和颅顶不对称(CVA)的激光扫描数据,CVA 定义为从额颧突到对侧额点的两条对角线测量值之间的差异。
纳入 4 名男性和 1 名女性,平均就诊年龄为 2.8 个月(1.1-3.9 个月)。所有患者均为不完全矢状缝早闭(1 例患者还存在不完全左人字缝早闭,另 1 例患者存在不完全左冠状缝早闭)。手术平均年龄为 3.5 个月(2.0-4.7 个月),无重大并发症。所有患者均接受术后头盔治疗。末次随访时的平均年龄为 12.8 个月(5.3-23.7 个月),平均随访时间为 9.3 个月(0.5-19.6 个月)。3 名患者获得了最终的激光扫描评估,结果显示 CI 从平均 71.3(70-73)改善至 84.3(82-86),CVA 从平均 9.67mm(2-22mm)改善至 1.67mm(1-2mm)。
微创直接切除融合颅骨缝的受累部分,然后对表型颅缝早闭患者进行头盔治疗是一种安全有效的治疗策略。这种技术适用于非常年幼的患者,似乎与完全切除骨缝具有相似的效果。需要进一步的研究来观察这种方法是否会降低需要在以后生活中进行颅骨成形术的患者的畸形严重程度。