Literature DB >> 21665280

Prevalence and characteristics of abnormal head posture in children with Down syndrome: a 20-year retrospective, descriptive review.

Alina V Dumitrescu1, Daniela C Moga, Susannah Q Longmuir, Richard J Olson, Arlene V Drack.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: To characterize the abnormal head posture (AHP) in children with Down syndrome (DS). The study had 3 aims: to estimate the prevalence of AHP, to describe the distribution of different causes for AHP, and to evaluate the long-term outcomes of AHP in children with DS evaluated at the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics between 1989 and 2009.
DESIGN: Retrospective chart review. PARTICIPANTS: Two hundred fifty-nine patient records.
METHODS: The study data were analyzed using chi-square tests (the Fisher exact test when appropriate) to describe the relationship between the outcome of interest and each study covariate. A predictive logistic regression model for AHP was constructed including all the significant covariates. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Abnormal head posture.
RESULTS: Over the study period, 259 records of patients with DS were identified. Of these, 64 (24.7%) patients had AHP. The most frequent cause of AHP was incomitant strabismus in 17 (26.6%) of 64 patients. The second most frequent cause of AHP was nystagmus, in 14 (21.8%) of 64 patients. For a substantial number of patients with AHP, the cause could not be determined. They represented 12 (18.8%) of all the patients with AHP in this study and 12 (4.6%) of all patients with DS examined. When compared with patients with AHP from a determined cause, this subgroup has a statistically significantly (P = 0.027, Fisher exact test) higher percentage of atlantoaxial instability. In the study population, 9 (14.1%) of 64 patients with AHP had more than 1 cause for AHP. Refractive errors, ptosis, unilateral hearing loss, and neck and spine musculoskeletal abnormalities were responsible for AHP in a small percentage of patients. Of all the patients with AHP, 23 (35.9%) improved their head posture with treatment (glasses or surgery). An additional 6 (9.4%) patients improved their posture spontaneously, over time and without treatment.
CONCLUSIONS: The prevalence of AHP in the children with DS evaluated was 24.7%. From this analysis, having strabismus of any kind and particularly incomitant strabismus, nystagmus, or both is highly correlated with the development of an AHP. Almost 19% of DS patients with AHP had no definitive cause that could be determined.
Copyright © 2011 American Academy of Ophthalmology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2011        PMID: 21665280      PMCID: PMC7110429          DOI: 10.1016/j.ophtha.2011.02.026

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ophthalmology        ISSN: 0161-6420            Impact factor:   12.079


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2.  Abnormal ocular head postures: Part IV.

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3.  Abnormal ocular head postures: Part II.

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4.  Ocular causes of abnormal head postures.

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5.  Ocular manifestations in Down syndrome.

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6.  Strabismus and binocular functions in a sample of Swedish children aged 4-15 years.

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7.  Atlantoaxial dislocation related to instilling eyedrops in a patient with Down's syndrome.

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8.  A multi-disciplinary study of the ocular, orthopedic, and neurologic causes of abnormal head postures in children.

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Review 9.  Ophthalmic abnormalities in children with Down syndrome.

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10.  Effects of intensity of treadmill training on developmental outcomes and stepping in infants with Down syndrome: a randomized trial.

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