best practice for conservative management of plagiocephaly: prevention

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Best Practice for Conservative Management of Plagiocephaly: Prevention

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Page 1: Best Practice for Conservative Management of Plagiocephaly: Prevention

Best Practice for Conservative Management of Plagiocephaly:

Prevention

Page 2: Best Practice for Conservative Management of Plagiocephaly: Prevention

What is Plagiocephaly??

“skewed head” Mechanical

factors alter head shape

Post natal positioning of infant on same side of head

Parallelogram

Page 3: Best Practice for Conservative Management of Plagiocephaly: Prevention

Incidence:

‘Back to Sleep” campaign: SIDS Incidence of SIDS reduced from

2.6/1000 in 1986 to 1/1000 in 1998 Incidence of plagiocephaly has

increased from 1/300 to 1/60 between 1974 and 1996

Huge increase in referrals to physiotherapy

Page 4: Best Practice for Conservative Management of Plagiocephaly: Prevention

Objectives:

To review the evidence for the best practice in the conservative management of infants with Plagiocephaly

To develop guidelines for physiotherapy management of infants who are seen through the EIP Program

Ensure knowledge transfer occurs to clinicians at QACCH

Page 5: Best Practice for Conservative Management of Plagiocephaly: Prevention

Literature Review:

1 Systematic Review: Bialocerowski et al reviewed all research reports related to conservative management between Jan 1983 and December 2003. Two studies subsequent to Bialocerowski were also evaluated

Of 18 studies reviewed, none were RCT’s. ie Level I evidence All were case series or comparison studies, not randomly assigned, ie. Level III or IV. Considerable biases were present within each study.

Centre protocols, based on expert opinion of best practice, influenced many study designs

Page 6: Best Practice for Conservative Management of Plagiocephaly: Prevention

Treatment of existing positional plagiocephaly

Counterpositioning is recommended for babies up to about 6 months of age when supervised

If your baby has a flat spot, turn your baby slightly off his or her back at about a 45 degree angle. This will take the pressure off the flat spot. Use a crib roll to prevent your baby from rolling onto the tummy.

Page 7: Best Practice for Conservative Management of Plagiocephaly: Prevention

Neck mobility activities

Studies have found that up to 12% of infants with PP may have congenital muscular torticollis

Another 64% may have sternocleido- mastoid imbalance

These muscular asymmetries perpetuate the positional preference of the infant.

Early physiotherapy to restore active and passive cervical mobility is recommended if any muscle imbalance is found in PP

Page 8: Best Practice for Conservative Management of Plagiocephaly: Prevention

Repositioning

Caregivers instructed in: Do not allow infant to sleep on flat spot Position interest on non flattened side Adjust carry, hold, feeding positions Active head turning incorporated in play Adjust/ minimize time in baby seats/car

seats Early supervised tummy time

Page 9: Best Practice for Conservative Management of Plagiocephaly: Prevention

Helmet Therapy

In infants with moderate to severe plagiocephaly, parents will be given information that helmetting may be beneficial

Page 10: Best Practice for Conservative Management of Plagiocephaly: Prevention

Comments re helmetting:

Expense (up to $2000) and travel Hot, sweaty, skin injury Brachycephalic children hard to fit Lack of infant acceptance, more so

in older infants Parent embarrassment

Page 11: Best Practice for Conservative Management of Plagiocephaly: Prevention

Determinants:

Predominantly male: 60-70% Predominantly right-sided Caucasian Increased incidence associated with: multi-parity Prematurity Breech delivery

Page 12: Best Practice for Conservative Management of Plagiocephaly: Prevention

Determinants:

Higher prevalence of PP found in childrenthat: Sleep on their back Don’t have head position varied Spend less than 5 minutes/day in

prone Are always bottle fed with same hand

Page 13: Best Practice for Conservative Management of Plagiocephaly: Prevention

Associated Problems:

There is some evidence of increased incidence of the following in infants with PP:

Scoliosis, rib, hip, foot problems Visual disturbances (strabismus,

astigmatism, field defects) Subtle developmental delayThe cause/effect relationship of these is

unclear.

Page 14: Best Practice for Conservative Management of Plagiocephaly: Prevention

Prevention: Counseling of parents should include: Limit time infant is on back during the

day Alternate head position Tummy time for more than 5 minutes per

day while baby is awake,gradually increasing

Minimizing time in car seats/seats Watch for positional preference Change orientation to activities

Page 15: Best Practice for Conservative Management of Plagiocephaly: Prevention

Physiotherapists in the Early Intervention would like to ensure that the necessary information for prevention of plagiocephaly is available to families within VIHA by sharing it with our partners in pre, peri and post natal health