Argenta L C, David L R, Wilson J A, Bell W O
Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Bowman Gray School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, North Carolina 27157-1075, USA.
J Craniofac Surg. 1996 Jan;7(1):5-11. doi: 10.1097/00001665-199601000-00005.
Abnormalities of the occipital cranial suture in infancy can cause significant posterior cranial asymmetry, malposition of the ears, distortion of the cranial base, deformation of the forehead, and facial asymmetry. Over the past 2 years, we have noted a dramatic increase in the incidence of deformation of the occipital skull in our tertiary referral center. Our patient referral base has not changed appreciably over the past 5 years and patients have been referred from the same primary practitioner base. The timing of this increase correlates closely with the acceptance in our area of recommended changes in sleeping position to supine or side positioning for infants because of the fear of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS). A total of 51 infants with occipital cranial deformity, with a mean age of 5.5 months at presentation, have been evaluated and treated by a single craniofacial surgeon in the 16-month period from September 1993 to December 1994. Older infants were treated with continuous positioning by the parent keeping the infant off the involved side. Younger infants and those with poor head control were treated with a soft-shell helmet. Mean timing of initial diagnosis and start of treatment was 5.5 months. Mean duration of helmet for positional treatment was 3.8 months. To date, only 3 of 51 patients have required surgical intervention, and other patients demonstrated spontaneous improvement of all measured parameters. Follow up has ranged from 8 to 24 months. We believe that most occipital plagiocephaly deformities are deformations rather than true cranio-synostoses. Despite varying amounts of suture abnormality evidenced on computed tomographic scans, most deformities can be corrected without surgery. In cases where progression of the cranial deformity occurs, despite conservative therapy, surgical intervention should be undertaken at approximately 1 year of age. The almost universal acceptance in the State of North Carolina of positioning neonates on their backs to avoid SIDS, may well increase the incidence of these deformities in the future.
婴儿期枕骨颅缝异常可导致严重的后颅不对称、耳部位置异常、颅底变形、前额变形和面部不对称。在过去两年中,我们在三级转诊中心注意到枕骨颅骨变形的发生率急剧上升。在过去5年里,我们的患者转诊基数没有明显变化,患者均来自相同的基层医疗从业者群体。这一增加的时间与我们地区接受因担心婴儿猝死综合征(SIDS)而建议婴儿采用仰卧或侧卧睡眠姿势的时间密切相关。在1993年9月至1994年12月的16个月期间,一位颅面外科医生对51例枕骨颅骨畸形婴儿进行了评估和治疗,这些婴儿就诊时的平均年龄为5.5个月。年龄较大的婴儿通过家长持续保持婴儿患侧不接触床面来进行治疗。年龄较小的婴儿以及头部控制能力较差的婴儿则使用软壳头盔进行治疗。初始诊断和开始治疗的平均时间为5.5个月。用于体位治疗的头盔平均佩戴时间为3.8个月。迄今为止,51例患者中只有3例需要手术干预,其他患者所有测量参数均有自发改善。随访时间为8至24个月。我们认为,大多数枕部斜头畸形是变形而非真正的颅缝早闭。尽管计算机断层扫描显示有不同程度的缝线异常,但大多数畸形无需手术即可纠正。在颅骨畸形持续进展的情况下,尽管采取了保守治疗,仍应在大约1岁时进行手术干预。北卡罗来纳州几乎普遍接受让新生儿仰卧以避免SIDS,这很可能会在未来增加这些畸形的发生率。