Anthropometric changes in the skull base in children with sagittal craniosynostosis submitted to surgical correction

Childs Nerv Syst. 2021 May;37(5):1669-1676. doi: 10.1007/s00381-021-05041-x. Epub 2021 Jan 15.

Abstract

Purpose: Studies have examined the impact of fusion of the sagittal suture in the skull base while others have evaluated the growth of the skull base before and after surgery. This study aims to perform the anthropometric measures of the skull base in children with scaphocephaly to evaluate the influence of surgical repair in the remodeling of the skull base and anthropometric measures.

Methods: Twenty-one children with diagnosis of scaphocephaly were operated between April 2007 and October 2008, and anthropometric measures at the skull base were performed before and after a year of surgery. The measures were the cranial index (CI), distance between the crista galli and tuberculum sellar (CG-TS), distance between the crista galli and the internal auditory meatus (CG-IAM), distance between the oval foramen (OF-OF), distance between the internal auditory meatus (IAM-IAM), the angle of the skull base (Â1), and the angle between the nasion, center of sella, and basion (Â2).

Results: There was a normalization of the CI in all children, confirming an appropriate cranial remodeling. The CG-TS measure evaluated the anterior skull base, with proportional growth of 12.5%. The mediolateral growth was observed by the increase of OF-OF measures by 8.5% and IAM-IAM by 9.5%. The CG-TS measure grew by 7.2%. There was no statistical difference in the angles analyzed.

Conclusion: Surgical treatment of scaphocephaly led to remodeling of the skull base, confirmed by the changes of anthropometric measures taken before and after a year of surgery.

Keywords: Anthropometry; Sagittal craniosynostosis; Scaphocephaly; Skull base.

MeSH terms

  • Child
  • Cranial Sutures / surgery
  • Craniosynostoses* / surgery
  • Ethmoid Bone
  • Facial Bones
  • Humans
  • Infant
  • Skull
  • Skull Base / surgery