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Published in: Neurosurgical Review 1/2024

01-12-2024 | Craniosynostosis | Research

Long-term results of minimally invasive strip craniectomy without helmet therapy for scaphocephaly – a single-centre experience

Authors: Katharina Lutz, Andreas Röhrig, Jasmin Al-Hourani, Sandra Kunze, Jana Forkosh, Jonathan Wermelinger, Martina Messing-Jünger

Published in: Neurosurgical Review | Issue 1/2024

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Abstract

Scaphocephaly is the most common type of craniosynostosis and various surgical techniques are used for treatment. Due to late postoperative changes of the head shape, long-term outcome data is important for evaluating any new surgical technique. At our institution, minimally invasive strip craniectomy without regular helmet therapy is the standard treatment in scaphocephalic patients. Between October 2021 and February 2023, we retrospectively examined the skull shape of patients who underwent minimally invasive strip craniectomy for scaphocephaly using a 3D surface scan technique. The cephalic index (CI), the need for helmet therapy and additional cosmetic outcome parameters were investigated. We included 70 patients (72.5% male). The mean follow-up time was 46 (10–125) months and the mean CI was 75.7 (66.7–85.2). In 58 patients, the final cosmetic result was rated as “excellent/good” (mean CI: 76.3; 70.4–85.0), in 11 as “intermediate” (mean CI: 73.3; 66.7–77.6), and in one case as “unsatisfactory” (CI 69.3). The presence of a suboccipital protrusion was associated with a “less than good” outcome. The CI correlated significantly with the overall outcome, the presence of frontal bossing, and the interval between scan and surgery (age at scan). Minimally invasive strip craniectomy is an elegant and safe method to correct scaphocephaly. Our data show good cosmetic results in the long term even without regular postoperative helmet therapy.
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Metadata
Title
Long-term results of minimally invasive strip craniectomy without helmet therapy for scaphocephaly – a single-centre experience
Authors
Katharina Lutz
Andreas Röhrig
Jasmin Al-Hourani
Sandra Kunze
Jana Forkosh
Jonathan Wermelinger
Martina Messing-Jünger
Publication date
01-12-2024
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
Neurosurgical Review / Issue 1/2024
Print ISSN: 0344-5607
Electronic ISSN: 1437-2320
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10143-024-02406-z

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