Cargando…

A 3D Follow-Up Study of Cranial Asymmetry from Early Infancy to Toddler Age after Preterm versus Term Birth

Preterm infants are at higher risk for both symmetrical and asymmetrical head molding. This study involved 3D stereophotogrammetry to assess the cranial growth, molding, and incidence of deformational plagiocephaly (DP) in preterm children compared to term born children. Thirty-four preterm infants...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Launonen, Anniina M., Aarnivala, Henri, Kyteas, Panagiotis, Vuollo, Ville, Heikkinen, Tuomo, Kau, Chung H., Pirttiniemi, Pertti, Harila, Virpi, Valkama, A. Marita
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6832468/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31614700
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm8101665
_version_ 1783466179626532864
author Launonen, Anniina M.
Aarnivala, Henri
Kyteas, Panagiotis
Vuollo, Ville
Heikkinen, Tuomo
Kau, Chung H.
Pirttiniemi, Pertti
Harila, Virpi
Valkama, A. Marita
author_facet Launonen, Anniina M.
Aarnivala, Henri
Kyteas, Panagiotis
Vuollo, Ville
Heikkinen, Tuomo
Kau, Chung H.
Pirttiniemi, Pertti
Harila, Virpi
Valkama, A. Marita
author_sort Launonen, Anniina M.
collection PubMed
description Preterm infants are at higher risk for both symmetrical and asymmetrical head molding. This study involved 3D stereophotogrammetry to assess the cranial growth, molding, and incidence of deformational plagiocephaly (DP) in preterm children compared to term born children. Thirty-four preterm infants and 34 term born controls were enrolled in this study from Oulu University Hospital, Finland. Three-dimensional head images were obtained at the age of 2–4 months (T1), 5–7 months (T2), 11–13 months (T3), and 2.5–3 years (T4) from the term equivalent age (TEA). There was no statistically significant difference in oblique cranial length ratio (OCLR), cephalic index (CI), or weighted asymmetry score (wAS) between the two groups. Occipital flattening, defined by flatness score (FS) was statistically significantly greater in the preterm group than in the term group at T1–T4 (p < 0.05). In both groups, OCLR improved gradually over time. There were no instances, in either group, of severe DP and no moderate DP after T2. Results indicate that DP affects preterm and full-term children almost equally during the first three years of life, and cranial asymmetry resolves at a similar rate in both preterm and term groups after three months of corrected age. Preterm infants present with more occipital flattening than full-term children.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6832468
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2019
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-68324682019-11-25 A 3D Follow-Up Study of Cranial Asymmetry from Early Infancy to Toddler Age after Preterm versus Term Birth Launonen, Anniina M. Aarnivala, Henri Kyteas, Panagiotis Vuollo, Ville Heikkinen, Tuomo Kau, Chung H. Pirttiniemi, Pertti Harila, Virpi Valkama, A. Marita J Clin Med Article Preterm infants are at higher risk for both symmetrical and asymmetrical head molding. This study involved 3D stereophotogrammetry to assess the cranial growth, molding, and incidence of deformational plagiocephaly (DP) in preterm children compared to term born children. Thirty-four preterm infants and 34 term born controls were enrolled in this study from Oulu University Hospital, Finland. Three-dimensional head images were obtained at the age of 2–4 months (T1), 5–7 months (T2), 11–13 months (T3), and 2.5–3 years (T4) from the term equivalent age (TEA). There was no statistically significant difference in oblique cranial length ratio (OCLR), cephalic index (CI), or weighted asymmetry score (wAS) between the two groups. Occipital flattening, defined by flatness score (FS) was statistically significantly greater in the preterm group than in the term group at T1–T4 (p < 0.05). In both groups, OCLR improved gradually over time. There were no instances, in either group, of severe DP and no moderate DP after T2. Results indicate that DP affects preterm and full-term children almost equally during the first three years of life, and cranial asymmetry resolves at a similar rate in both preterm and term groups after three months of corrected age. Preterm infants present with more occipital flattening than full-term children. MDPI 2019-10-11 /pmc/articles/PMC6832468/ /pubmed/31614700 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm8101665 Text en © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Launonen, Anniina M.
Aarnivala, Henri
Kyteas, Panagiotis
Vuollo, Ville
Heikkinen, Tuomo
Kau, Chung H.
Pirttiniemi, Pertti
Harila, Virpi
Valkama, A. Marita
A 3D Follow-Up Study of Cranial Asymmetry from Early Infancy to Toddler Age after Preterm versus Term Birth
title A 3D Follow-Up Study of Cranial Asymmetry from Early Infancy to Toddler Age after Preterm versus Term Birth
title_full A 3D Follow-Up Study of Cranial Asymmetry from Early Infancy to Toddler Age after Preterm versus Term Birth
title_fullStr A 3D Follow-Up Study of Cranial Asymmetry from Early Infancy to Toddler Age after Preterm versus Term Birth
title_full_unstemmed A 3D Follow-Up Study of Cranial Asymmetry from Early Infancy to Toddler Age after Preterm versus Term Birth
title_short A 3D Follow-Up Study of Cranial Asymmetry from Early Infancy to Toddler Age after Preterm versus Term Birth
title_sort 3d follow-up study of cranial asymmetry from early infancy to toddler age after preterm versus term birth
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6832468/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31614700
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm8101665
work_keys_str_mv AT launonenanniinam a3dfollowupstudyofcranialasymmetryfromearlyinfancytotoddlerageafterpretermversustermbirth
AT aarnivalahenri a3dfollowupstudyofcranialasymmetryfromearlyinfancytotoddlerageafterpretermversustermbirth
AT kyteaspanagiotis a3dfollowupstudyofcranialasymmetryfromearlyinfancytotoddlerageafterpretermversustermbirth
AT vuolloville a3dfollowupstudyofcranialasymmetryfromearlyinfancytotoddlerageafterpretermversustermbirth
AT heikkinentuomo a3dfollowupstudyofcranialasymmetryfromearlyinfancytotoddlerageafterpretermversustermbirth
AT kauchungh a3dfollowupstudyofcranialasymmetryfromearlyinfancytotoddlerageafterpretermversustermbirth
AT pirttiniemipertti a3dfollowupstudyofcranialasymmetryfromearlyinfancytotoddlerageafterpretermversustermbirth
AT harilavirpi a3dfollowupstudyofcranialasymmetryfromearlyinfancytotoddlerageafterpretermversustermbirth
AT valkamaamarita a3dfollowupstudyofcranialasymmetryfromearlyinfancytotoddlerageafterpretermversustermbirth
AT launonenanniinam 3dfollowupstudyofcranialasymmetryfromearlyinfancytotoddlerageafterpretermversustermbirth
AT aarnivalahenri 3dfollowupstudyofcranialasymmetryfromearlyinfancytotoddlerageafterpretermversustermbirth
AT kyteaspanagiotis 3dfollowupstudyofcranialasymmetryfromearlyinfancytotoddlerageafterpretermversustermbirth
AT vuolloville 3dfollowupstudyofcranialasymmetryfromearlyinfancytotoddlerageafterpretermversustermbirth
AT heikkinentuomo 3dfollowupstudyofcranialasymmetryfromearlyinfancytotoddlerageafterpretermversustermbirth
AT kauchungh 3dfollowupstudyofcranialasymmetryfromearlyinfancytotoddlerageafterpretermversustermbirth
AT pirttiniemipertti 3dfollowupstudyofcranialasymmetryfromearlyinfancytotoddlerageafterpretermversustermbirth
AT harilavirpi 3dfollowupstudyofcranialasymmetryfromearlyinfancytotoddlerageafterpretermversustermbirth
AT valkamaamarita 3dfollowupstudyofcranialasymmetryfromearlyinfancytotoddlerageafterpretermversustermbirth