单缝线缝合手术后的运动:对缝合研究组成员的调查。

IF 3.3 2区 医学 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Christopher M Bonfield, Allyson L Alexander, Craig B Birgfeld, Daniel E Couture, Lisa R David, Brooke French, Barbu Gociman, Jesse A Goldstein, Michael S Golinko, John R W Kestle, Amy Lee, Suresh N Magge, Ian F Pollack, S Alex Rottgers, Christopher M Runyan, Matthew D Smyth, Raj Vyas, C Corbett Wilkinson, Gary B Skolnick, Kamlesh B Patel, Jennifer M Strahle
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:婴儿时期有单缝合线颅缝闭锁(SSC)手术史的患者通常希望在童年后期参加运动。然而,神经外科医生和颅面外科医生并没有明确的指导方针来指导父母他们的孩子应该或不应该参加哪些运动。因此,本研究旨在评估经验丰富的神经外科医生和颅面外科医生对这些患者的护理人员进行体育参与咨询的态度和实践模式。方法:对北美9家机构Synostosis研究组(SynRG)的神经外科医生和颅面整形外科医生进行调查,以确定既往SSC手术患者对运动参与的态度。调查回复在REDCap中匿名收集。对于婴儿时期接受手术治疗的SSC患者和需要延迟颅骨成形术的患者,我们回答了有关具体运动参与建议的问题。问题涉及非综合征性SSC患者,无相关的Chiari畸形、鼻咽或其他颅内/椎管内异常。结果:共邀请20名外科医生参与调查,其中18名(90%)(9名神经外科医生和9名颅面整形外科医生)完全完成了调查。只有1位(5.6%)的外科医生建议愈合理想的患者不要参加任何运动。如果需要颅骨成形术,39%-50%的外科医生会根据颅骨成形术的程度,建议患者不要参加某些活动(最常见的是限制足球/橄榄球、拳击、冰球、长曲棍球和摔跤)。总体而言,在需要颅骨成形术的患者中,更多的整形外科医生(56%-67%)建议患者不要参加体育运动(包括棒球/垒球、篮球、体操和足球等低接触性运动),而神经外科医生(22%-33%)建议患者不要参加体育运动。结论:对于婴儿时期有SSC手术史且愈合良好的儿童,SynRG外科医生一般不反对他们参加体育运动(包括接触性运动)。在需要颅骨成形术的患者中,39%-50%的外科医生建议不参加高接触性运动。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Sports after single-suture synostosis surgery: a survey of Synostosis Research Group members.

Objective: Patients with a history of surgery for single-suture craniosynostosis (SSC) as an infant often wish to participate in sports later in childhood. However, there are no established guidelines from neurosurgeons and craniofacial surgeons to guide parents in which sports their child should or should not participate. Therefore, this study aimed to evaluate the attitudes and practice patterns of experienced neurosurgeons and craniofacial surgeons regarding the counseling of caregivers of these patients about sports participation.

Methods: A survey was administered to neurosurgeons and craniofacial plastic surgeons of the Synostosis Research Group (SynRG), a group of 9 North American institutions, to identify attitudes toward sports participation in patients with past SSC surgery. Survey responses were collected anonymously in REDCap. Questions regarding specific sports participation recommendations for patients who underwent surgery as an infant for SSC with ideal healing and for those who required a delayed cranioplasty were answered. Questions pertained to patients with nonsyndromic SSC without associated Chiari malformation, syrinx, or other intracranial/intraspinal anomalies.

Results: Overall, 20 surgeons were invited to participate in the survey, with 18 (90%) (9 neurosurgeons and 9 craniofacial plastic surgeons) fully completing it. Only 1 (5.6%) surgeon counseled against any sports participation for patients with ideal healing. If cranioplasty was required, 39%-50% of surgeons counseled against some participation (most commonly restricting football/rugby, boxing, ice hockey, lacrosse, and wrestling), depending on the extent of the cranioplasty. Overall, more plastic surgeons (56%-67%) counseled against sports participation (including lower-contact sports such as baseball/softball, basketball, gymnastics, and soccer) than neurosurgeons (22%-33%) in patients who required cranioplasty.

Conclusions: SynRG surgeons generally did not counsel against sports participation (including contact sports) for children with a history of SSC surgery as an infant who had ideal healing. In patients requiring cranioplasty, 39%-50% of surgeons recommended against high-contact sports participation.

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来源期刊
Neurosurgical focus
Neurosurgical focus CLINICAL NEUROLOGY-SURGERY
CiteScore
6.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
261
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Information not localized
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