Cerebral Palsy. Considerations Upon 249 Consecutive Patients and Review of Literature

Curr Health Sci J. 2019 Oct-Dec;45(4):405-411. doi: 10.12865/CHSJ.45.04.09. Epub 2019 Dec 30.

Abstract

Aim: to determine the prevalence of cerebral palsy (C.P.) among children and to describe its main characteristics (clinical forms, treatment plan, and results).

Material and methods: 249 C.P were studied (120 boys and 129 girls, aged between 0 and 12 years) during 2,321 consecutive clinic visits (incidence 10.7%) to a private pediatric orthopedic clinic in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, between 2011 and 2016. Spastic type was the main clinical form (231=92.8%), spastic diplegia being the most frequent (166=71.9%). The treatment was complex: conservative only in 42.2%; surgery indicated in 149 (59.8%) cases was performed only in 81 cases, by means of muscle and/or bone procedures, depending on the lesion balance.

Results: The postoperative results were excellent in 2.4% of cases, acceptable to some extent in 93.8% and poor in 3.8%. We registered a recurrence rate of 14.8%, a postoperative morbidity rate of 6.17% with a postoperative mortality rate of 0. Treatment results could not be assessed in 129 (51.9%) cases due to lack of follow up.

Conclusion: 1. C.P. represents the third most common diagnosis in pediatric orthopedic private practice. 2. The treatment results were acceptable in most cases, but not optimal. 3. Gait analysis using in the preoperative planning could improve significantly the outcome, especially in complicated cases.

Keywords: Cerebral palsy (C.P.); treatment.

Publication types

  • Case Reports