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Lauren Clemson, Josh Hardy,

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Congenital Muscular Torticollis and Plagiocephaly LAUREN CLEMSON, JOSH HARDY, & LIZ WEISS REGIS UNIVERSITY DPT PROGRAM The infant s preferred position is left ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Lauren Clemson, Josh Hardy,


1
Congenital Muscular Torticollis and Plagiocephaly
  • Lauren Clemson, Josh Hardy,
  • Liz Weiss
  • Regis University DPT Program

2
Objectives
  • By the end of this presentation you will be able
    to
  • Write a PICO question to direct your literature
    search
  • Describe the level of evidence present in
    pediatric literature concerning plagiocephaly and
    congenital muscular torticollis (CMT)
  • Understand current literature supporting
    treatment for plagiocephaly and CMT
  • Apply statistical findings to patients with
    plagiocephaly
  • Identify shortcomings in the body of knowledge
    concerning plagiocephaly and CMT

3
Our Case
  • 4 Months old
  • Mild right congenital muscular torticollis (CMT)
  • Left rotation (lackinglt15 right rotation), right
    side bend
  • Mild plagiocephaly (8mm)
  • Therapy sessions 1x/week
  • for the last 4 weeks.

4
PICO Question
  • Patient - Description of the patient or the
    target disorder of interest.
  • Intervention - Therapy, exposure, diagnostic
    test, prognostic factor, or patient perception.
  • Comparison Main alternative to the intervention
    in question.
  • Outcome - Clinical outcome of interest to you ,
    your patient, and your patients
    caregiver/family.

5
Formulated 2 PICO questions
  • Congenital Muscular Torticollis (CMT)
  • For a 4 month old male infant with right-sided
    congenital muscular torticollis, is manual
    stretching in conjunction with a home program and
    education more effective than a home program and
    education alone to increase available cervical
    range of motion?
  • Plagiocephaly
  • For a 4 month old male infant with mild
    plagiocephaly secondary to congential muscular
    torticollis, is repositioning more effective
    than helmet therapy to decrease head/facial
    asymmetry?

So we searched the literature
6
Hierarchy of Evidence
7
And Found
  • CMT treatments
  • No Randomized Controlled Trials (RCTs)
  • Only low-level evidence available
  • All studies had numerous biases, methodological
    flaws, and glaring inconsistencies.
  • Plagiocephaly treatments
  • No RCTs
  • BUT a 2008 systematic review
  • of cohorts was identified.

8
Current Childrens Hospital Plagiocephaly Protocol
  • Younger child (lt5mo) Treat the child
    conservatively with repositioning and caregiver
    education. (positioning, tummy time, feeding,
    etc.)
  • Older child (gt5mo) Examine the extent of
    plagiocephaly via anthropometric measurement or
    imaging. Based on the results, helmet therapy may
    or may not be indicated. (deviation of gt5 mm in
    sagittal plane is considered pathologic)

9
Critical Appraisal of Systematic Review on
Plagiocephaly
  • Cochrane database plagiocephaly
  • No Cochrane reviews available
  • Three other systematic reviews available
  • PubMed, CINAHL, and MEDLINE plagiocephaly
  • No RCTs or cohort studies of high methodological
    quality were found.
  • Xia J, Kennedy K, Teichgraeber J, et al.
    Nonsurgical treatment of deformational
    plagiocephaly A systematic review. Arch Pediatr
    Adolesc Med. 2008162(8)719-727.

10
Nonsurgical treatment of deformational
Plagiocephaly
  • Review included 7 cohort studies (Level III
    Evidence)
  • Studies not analyzed for homogeneity of subjects
    or treatment
  • Inclusion Criteria
  • Deformational plagiocephaly with or without CMT.
  • Healthy in terms of conditions that may interfere
    with treatment of plagiocephaly.
  • No previous treatment
  • for plagiocephaly
  • Studies designed to compare
  • helmet/molding therapy to
  • another nonsurgical intervention.

11
Data Extraction
  • 2 reviewers used Critical Appraisal Skills
    Program critical review form for cohort studies.
  • Are the results of the studies valid?
  • What are the results of the study?
  • Will the results help me locally?
  • Effect size reported by a point
  • estimate and a 95 confidence
  • interval.
  • Robustness of each study
  • was evaluated and potential
  • biases of each study were
  • identified.

12
Results
  • 5 of 7 studies utilized an objective outcome
    measure
  • These 5 found helmet/molding therapy to be more
    effective than repositioning therapy as
    determined by anthropometric measurements.
  • Selection bias identified resulting in more
    severe cases of plagiocephaly being placed in the
    helmet/molding groups.
  • No mention of blinding during outcome assessment,
    measurement bias may have occurred
  • 2 of 7 studies found repositioning
  • and helmet/molding therapies to
  • be equally effective, but helmet/
  • molding had significantly shorter
  • treatment durations.

13
Results continued
  • Only 1 of 7 studies was included in calculation
    of treatment effects.
  • Poor or incomplete reporting of statistics
  • Significant measurement bias
  • Presence of repositioning intervention
    indeterminable
  • Helmet/molding utilized after failure of
    repositioning therapy
  • Helmet/molding therapy relative risk
  • 1.3, CI95, 1.2-1.4
  • Absolute risk reduction, improvement with
    helmet/molding therapy
  • 0.21, CI95, 0.15-0.27
  • Number needed to treat
  • 5.0, CI95, 4-7

14
Application to our kiddo
  • Literature suggests that he may benefit from
    helmet/molding therapy.
  • Expert opinion suggests waiting to utilize
    helmet/molding therapy until he is 6 months old.
  • Helmet/molding therapy is a low-risk option.
  • Helmet/molding therapy is expensive and rarely
    covered by insurance as it is seen as a primarily
    cosmetic intervention.

15
Our recommendations
  • Continue with manual stretching and home program.
  • Re-evaluate severity of plagiocephaly once the
    infant reaches 6 months of age.
  • If a deviation is still present, contact the
    infants physician to discuss helmet/molding
    therapy.
  • Present the infants family with options for
    treatment.
  • All recommendations based on low-level of
    evidence.

16
Current Childrens Hospital Plagiocephaly Protocol
  • Younger child (lt5mo) Treat the child
    conservatively with repositioning and caregiver
    education. (positioning, tummy time, feeding,
    etc.)
  • Older child (gt5mo) Have the child measured to
    evaluate the extent of skull deformity. Based on
    the results, helmet therapy may or may not then
    be indicated. (deviation of gt5 mm in sagittal
    plane is considered pathologic)
  • AVAILABLE EVIDENCE SUPPORTS THIS PROTOCOL!

17
Current Childrens Hospital CMT Protocol
  • Manual stretching, home program, and caregiver
    education
  • Kinesiotape
  • TOT Collar
  • Botox
  • KISS manual therapy
  • Surgical Intervention

18
Is There Evidence to Support the Protocol?
  • Manual stretching (Cheng, 2001 Van Vlimmeren,
    2006)
  • Safe and effective if initiated before 12 months
    of age.
  • 3 x 15 repetitions of gentle force for 1 second,
    with 10 seconds of rest between repetitions.
  • Home program and caregiver education (Van
    Vlimmeren, 2006)
  • Fair to excellent results when physical therapy
    treatment and caregiver education is utilized.
  • TOT Collar (Cottrill-Mosterman, 1987)
  • Stretching and TOT collar showed significant
    improvements in head tilt after six months of
    treatment compared to stretching alone.

19
Is There Evidence to Support the Protocol?
  • Botox (Oleszek, 2005)
  • 74 had improved cervical rotation or head tilt
    after the injections, and 7 experienced
    transient adverse events (specifically, mild
    dysphagia and neck weakness)
  • KISS manual therapy (Brand, 2005)
  • No scientific evidence that manual therapy is
    effective in treatment of KISS syndrome. Some
    evidence suggests that it may be a risky option.
  • Surgery (Shim, 2008 Van Vlimmeren, 2006)
  • In patients operated on at age 6 months to 2
    years of age, excellent results can be achieved
    by releasing the sternocleidomastoid.
  • Kinesotape (no published articles, based on
    expert opinion)
  • Microcurrent or other modalities (Kim, 2009)

20
Current Childrens Hospital CMT Protocol
  • Manual stretching, home program, and caregiver
    education
  • Kinesiotape
  • Tot Collar
  • Botox
  • KISS manual therapy
  • Surgical Intervention

MOST OF THE AVAILABLE EVIDENCE SUPPORTS THIS
PROTOCOL!
21
Current body of knowledge
  • Current evidence cannot definitively conclude
    that one treatment option is superior to another.
  • Evaluation criteria for treatment outcome needs
    to be standardized within the literature.
  • RCTs need to be performed with homogenous
    samples.
  • Selection and measurement biases must be
    alleviated.

22
Contribute to the body of knowledge
  • Track your patients and their progress
  • Documentation of severity of plagiocephaly via
    anthropometric measurement or diagnostic imaging
  • Documentation of head position via arthrodial
    protractor

23
  • Thank You!

24
References
  • Xia J, Kennedy K, Teichgraeber J, et al.
    Nonsurgical treatment of deformational
    plagiocephaly A systematic review. Arch Pediatr
    Adolesc Med. 2008162(8)719-727.
  • Grigsby K. Cranial Remolding Helmet Treatment of
    Plagiocephaly Comparison of Results and
    Treatment Length in Younger Versus Older Infant
    Populations. J Prosth Orth. 2009 21(1)55-63.
  • Cheng J, Wong M, et al. Clinical Determinants of
    the Outcome of Manual Stretching in the Treatment
    of Congenital Muscular Torticollis in Infants A
    prospective study of eight hundred and twenty-one
    patients. J Bone Joint. 2001 83A(5)679-687.
  • Van Vlimmeren L, Helders P, Van Adrichem L.
    Torticollis and plagiocephaly in infancy
    Therapeutic strategies. Ped Rehab.
    20069(1)4046.
  • Cheng J, Tang T, Chen M, Wong M, Wong E. The
    Clinical Presentation and Outcome of Treatment of
    Congenital Muscular Torticollis in Infant.sA
    Study of 1,086 Cases . J Ped Surg . 200035(7)
    1091-1096.
  • Brand P, Engelbert R, Helders P, Offringa M.
    Systematic Review of Effects of Manual Therapy in
    Infants with Kinetic Imbalance due to
    Suboccipital Strain (KISS) Syndrome. J Man Manip
    Ther. 200513(4)209-214.
  • Kim M, Kwon D R, Lee H. Therapeutic Effect of
    Microcurrent Therapy in Infants With Congenital
    Muscular Torticollis. Am Acad Phys Med Rehab.
    20091736-739.
  • Cottrill-Mosterman S, Jacques C, Bartlett D,
    Beauchamp R. Tubular orthosis for torticolis
    (TOT) A new approach to the correction of head
    tilt in congenital muscular torticollis.
    Abstract.
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