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Coronal Craniostenosis: Fetal Head Constraint as One Possible Cause

Coronal Craniostenosis: Fetal Head Constraint as One Possible Cause <jats:p>A retrospective study of 11 instances of idiopathic coronal craniostenosis in otherwise normal children revealed that early lightening, prolonged moderate to severe pelvic discomfort late in pregnancy, and/or an abnormal fetal lie were unusual gestational features indicative of intrauterine constraint for eight of these patients. The impression of unusual constraint in utero was futher implied by finding associated positional foot deformities in four of these latter eight children. We hypothesize that prolonged constraint of the fetal head may limit anteroposterior growth stretch at the coronal suture and thereby predispose toward early sutural fusion.</jats:p> http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Pediatrics CrossRef

Coronal Craniostenosis: Fetal Head Constraint as One Possible Cause

Pediatrics , Volume 65 (5): 995-999 – May 1, 1980

Coronal Craniostenosis: Fetal Head Constraint as One Possible Cause


Abstract

<jats:p>A retrospective study of 11 instances of idiopathic coronal craniostenosis in otherwise normal children revealed that early lightening, prolonged moderate to severe pelvic discomfort late in pregnancy, and/or an abnormal fetal lie were unusual gestational features indicative of intrauterine constraint for eight of these patients. The impression of unusual constraint in utero was futher implied by finding associated positional foot deformities in four of these latter eight children. We hypothesize that prolonged constraint of the fetal head may limit anteroposterior growth stretch at the coronal suture and thereby predispose toward early sutural fusion.</jats:p>

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Publisher
CrossRef
ISSN
0031-4005
DOI
10.1542/peds.65.5.995
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

<jats:p>A retrospective study of 11 instances of idiopathic coronal craniostenosis in otherwise normal children revealed that early lightening, prolonged moderate to severe pelvic discomfort late in pregnancy, and/or an abnormal fetal lie were unusual gestational features indicative of intrauterine constraint for eight of these patients. The impression of unusual constraint in utero was futher implied by finding associated positional foot deformities in four of these latter eight children. We hypothesize that prolonged constraint of the fetal head may limit anteroposterior growth stretch at the coronal suture and thereby predispose toward early sutural fusion.</jats:p>

Journal

PediatricsCrossRef

Published: May 1, 1980

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