斜头畸形与发育迟缓:一项系统综述

A. Martiniuk, C. Vujovich-Dunn, Miles Park, William Yu, Barbara R Lucas
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引用次数: 42

摘要

目的:变形性斜头畸形(包括斜头畸形和短头畸形)是一种常见的儿科疾病。出现头部形状改变的婴儿通常会出现发育迟缓。目前尚不清楚斜头畸形婴儿的发育迟缓有多普遍,以及这种发育迟缓在出现时能持续多久。本文旨在探讨斜头畸形与发育迟缓之间的关系,以指导临床实践。研究设计:进行系统评价。检索MEDLINE、EMBASE、CINAHL和PEDro数据库。从相关研究中提取有关研究样本、随访、设计和结果的数据。每个研究的方法学质量使用一个关键的评估工具进行评级。结果:检索到文献1315篇,其中符合纳入标准的文献19篇。在纳入的研究中,儿童的年龄从3个月到10岁不等。研究的局限性包括选择偏倚,评估人员的非盲性,以及在多篇论文中重复使用同一研究人群。大多数论文(11/19)在方法质量上被评为“中等”。19项研究中有13项报告了斜头畸形与发育迟缓之间的正相关,其中5项研究中有4项具有“强”的方法学质量。儿童≥24月龄的研究(9/12)比>24月龄的研究(3/7)发生延迟的频率更高。运动延迟是高质量论文中报道的最常见的受影响的领域(5/5的研究)。结论:本综述提示斜头畸形是发育迟缓风险增高的标志。临床医生应密切监测婴儿斜头畸形。及时转介到早期干预服务,如物理治疗可以改善运动迟缓,并确定婴儿的长期发展需求。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Plagiocephaly and Developmental Delay: A Systematic Review
Objective: Deformational plagiocephaly (includes plagiocephaly and brachycephaly) is a common pediatric condition. Infants who present with altered head shape often experience developmental delay. It is uncertain how common developmental delay is in infants with plagiocephaly and how sustained this is, when present. This review explores the association between plagiocephaly and developmental delay to guide clinical practice. Study Design: A systematic review was conducted. MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, and PEDro databases were searched. Data from relevant studies were extracted regarding study: sample, follow-up, design, and findings. Methodological quality of each study was rated using a critical appraisal tool. Results: The search recovered 1315 articles of which 19 met the inclusion criteria. In the included studies, the children's ages ranged from 3 months to 10 years. Study limitations included selection bias, nonblinding of assessors, and reuse of the same study population for multiple papers. Most papers (11/19) rated “moderate” on methodological quality. A positive association between plagiocephaly and developmental delay was reported in 13 of 19 studies, including 4 of 5 studies with “strong” methodological quality. Delay was more frequently in studies with children ⩽24 months of age (9/12 studies) compared with >24 months of age (3/7 studies). Motor delay was the most commonly affected domain reported in high-quality papers (5/5 studies). Conclusion: This review suggests plagiocephaly is a marker of elevated risk of developmental delays. Clinicians should closely monitor infants with plagiocephaly for this. Prompt referral to early intervention services such as physiotherapy may ameliorate motor delays and identify infants with longer term developmental needs.
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