Measuring for nonsynostotic head deformities in preterm infants during NICU management: A pilot study.

Early Hum Dev

Department of Physical Therapy, Wichita State University, 213 N. Mead St, Wichita, KS 67202, USA. Electronic address:

Published: April 2019

Background: Research has focused on the presence of nonsynostotic head deformities (NHD: plagiocephaly, dolichocephaly, brachycephaly) in preterm infants at discharge and within the first year after discharge. However, there is limited data on NHD in preterm neonates during neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) stay.

Aim: To acquire quantitative data on head shapes among preterm neonates during NICU hospital stay.

Study Design: Investigators performed weekly head measurements on 68 premature infants starting within two weeks of birth or when medically stable until discharge. Infants recruited for the study were born at <34 weeks gestational age.

Outcome Measures: Cranial index (CI) and cranial vault asymmetry index (CVAI) were calculated from Ballert cranial caliper measurements during the infants stay (27 to 40 weeks postmenstrual age) in the NICU/Special Care Nursery (SCN) setting. Inter-rater retest reliability was determined for CI and CVAI.

Results: Throughout the measurement period, CI consistently demonstrated dolichocephaly (CI < 0.76), and CVAI fluctuated above and below the range indicating plagiocephaly (CVAI ≥ 3.5%). Good to acceptable levels of test-retest reliability was demonstrated; prevalence of dolichocephaly and plagiocephaly at discharge was 82% and 36%, respectively; and mean head dimension measurement time for different combinations of bed types and support systems ranged from 1.1 to 1.9 min.

Conclusions: Following the progression of CI and CVAI during the NICU stay using the cranial caliper method is reliable, and a substantial presence of NHD was reported.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.earlhumdev.2019.03.002DOI Listing

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