Can Craniosynostosis be Diagnosed on Physical Examination? A Retrospective Review

Author:

Zavala Carmen A.1,Zima Laura A.2,Greives Matthew R.3,Fletcher Stephen A.2,Shah Manish N.2,Miller Brandon A.2,Sandberg David I.2,Nguyen Phuong D.3

Affiliation:

1. McGovern Medical School, UT Health Science Center Houston

2. Departments of Neurological Surgery and Pediatric Surgery, McGovern Medical School/UT Health and Children’s Memorial Hermann Hospital

3. Division of Pediatric Plastic Surgery, McGovern Medical School/UT Health and Children’s Memorial Hermann Hospital, Houston, TX

Abstract

Craniosynostosis is a developmental craniofacial defect in which one or more sutures of the skull fuse together prematurely. Uncorrected craniosynostosis may have serious complications including elevated intracranial pressure, developmental delay, and blindness. Proper diagnosis of craniosynostosis requires a physical examination of the head with assessment for symmetry and palpation of sutures for prominence. Often, if craniosynostosis is suspected, computed tomography (CT) imaging will be obtained. Recent literature has posited that this is unnecessary. This study aims to address whether physical examination alone is sufficient for the diagnosis and treatment planning of single suture craniosynostosis. Between 2015 and 2022, the Divisions of Pediatric Neurosurgery and Pediatric Plastic Surgery at UTHealth Houston evaluated 140 children under 36 months of age with suspected craniosynostosis by physical examination and subsequently ordered CT imaging for preoperative planning. Twenty-three patients received a clinical diagnosis of multi-sutural or syndromic craniosynostosis that was confirmed by CT. One hundred seventeen patients were diagnosed with single suture craniosynostosis on clinical examination and follow-up CT confirmed suture fusion in 109 (93.2%) patients and identified intracranial anomalies in 7 (6.0%) patients. These patients underwent surgical correction. Eight (6.8%) patients showed no evidence of craniosynostosis on CT imaging. Treatment for patients without fused sutures included molding helmets and observation alone. This evidence suggests that physical examination alone may be inadequate to accurately diagnose single suture synostosis, and surgery without preoperative CT evaluation could lead to unindicated procedures.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

General Medicine,Otorhinolaryngology,Surgery

Reference52 articles.

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3. Guideline for care of patients with the diagnoses of craniosynostosis: working group on craniosynostosis;Mathijssen;J Craniofac Surg,2015

4. Syndromic craniosynostosis: objective and parent-reported outcome measurements after cranio-facial remodelling surgeries;Uppar;Pediatr Neurosurg,2022

5. Cranial morphology associated with syndromic craniosynostosis: a potential detection of abnormality in patient’s cranial growth using angular statistics;Zulkipli;Cleft Palate Craniofac J,2022

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