Centre of Expertise Urban Vitality

The course of skull deformation from birth to 5 years of age

a prospective cohort study

Article

In a continuation of a prospective longitudinal cohort study in a healthy population on the course of skull shape from birth to 24 months, at 5 years of age, 248 children participated in a follow-up assessment using plagiocephalometry (ODDI-oblique diameter difference index, CPI-cranio proportional index). Data from the original study sampled at birth, 7 weeks, 6, 12, and 24 months were used in two linear mixed models. MAIN FINDINGS: (1) if deformational plagiocephaly (ODDI <104%) and/or positional preference at 7 weeks of age are absent, normal skull shape can be predicted at 5 years of age; (2) if positional preference occurs, ODDI is the highest at 7 weeks and decreases to a stable lowest value at 2 and 5 years of age; and (3) regarding brachycephaly, all children showed the highest CPI at 6 months of age with a gradual decrease over time. CONCLUSION: The course of skull deformation is favourable in most of the children in The Netherlands; at 5 years of age, brachycephaly is within the normal range for all children, whereas the severity of plagiocephaly is within the normal range in 80%, within the mild range in 19%, and within the moderate/severe range in 1%. Medical consumption may be reduced by providing early tailored counselling. What is Known: • Skull deformation prevalence increased after recommendations against Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, little is known about the longitudinal course. • Paediatric physical therapy intervention between 2 and 6 months of age reduces deformational plagiocephaly at 6 and 12 months of age. What is New: • The course of skull deformation is favourable in most of the children in The Netherlands; at 5 years of age, deformational brachycephaly is within the normal range for all children, whereas the severity of deformational plagiocephaly is within the normal range in 80%, within the mild range in 19%, and within the moderate to severe range in only 1%. • Paediatric physical therapy intervention does not influence the long-term outcome; it only influences the earlier decrease of the severity of deformational plagiocephaly.

Reference van Vlimmeren, L. A., Engelbert, R. HH., Pelsma, M., Groenewoud, H. MM., Boere-Boonekamp, M. M., & Nijhuis-van der Sanden, M. WG. (2016). The course of skull deformation from birth to 5 years of age: a prospective cohort study. European Journal of Pediatrics, 176(1), 11-21. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00431-016-2800-0
4 November 2016

Publication date

Nov 2016

Author(s)

Leo A van Vlimmeren
Maaike Pelsma
Hans MM Groenewoud
Magda M Boere-Boonekamp
Maria WG Nijhuis-van der Sanden
Maria WG Nijhuis-van der Sanden

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