Posterior Cranial Distraction in Craniosynostosis: A Systematic Review of the Literature

Author:

Khansa Ibrahim12ORCID,Drapeau Annie I.3,Pearson Gregory D.12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Nationwide Children's Hospital, Columbus, OH, USA

2. Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, The Ohio State University College of Medicine, Columbus, OH, USA

3. Section of Neurosurgery, Health Sciences Centre and University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada

Abstract

ObjectivePosterior cranial distraction (PCD) is a surgical technique to address craniosynostosis, especially in syndromic patients. The technique has the ability to significantly expand the cranium, while requiring minimal dural dissection, compared to cranial remodeling. Our goals were to determine the patient characteristics and surgical outcomes of PCD. The two questions that we sought to answer were: 1) What is the average published complication rate and the most common complications of PCD? and 2) How much intracranial volume expansion can one expect with PCD?DesignA PubMed database search of articles on PCD was performed. Case reports and articles with overlapping patients were excluded. A systematic review was performed using the remaining articles.Main Outcome MeasuresPatient data were extracted in order to determine the total number of patients, patients with a syndrome, types of syndromes, mean age at surgery, mean distraction distance, mean increase in intracranial volume, and complications.Results18 articles representing 325 patients were analyzed. A syndrome was present in 68.6% of patients. The mean age at time of surgery was 22.1 months. Mean distraction amount was 24.7 mm. Mean increase in intracranial volume was 253.2 cm3. The overall complication rate was 32.2%, with the most common complications being surgical-site infection, hardware-related complications and delayed wound healing.ConclusionsPCD is a powerful technique in the management of syndromic craniosynostosis, although complication rates are significantly higher than traditional remodeling techniques. Future studies should compare the effects of supratorcular and infratorcular osteotomies on intracranial volume, cosmesis and complications.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Otorhinolaryngology,Oral Surgery

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