Published Dec 24, 2003
angelbear
558 Posts
My 6 mos old grandson is having a CT scan tomorrow because they say his soft spot has closed to soon. I am not in pediatrics so I havent a clue as to what this may mean. Can anyone help me?
Zee_RN, BSN, RN
951 Posts
I'm not a peds nurse but this happened to a friend's daughter. She was diagnosed with "sagittal stenosis" -- a premature closing of the fontanels (soft spots). The skull could not then accommodate the growing brain. Her daughter required surgery to deliberately fracture the skull in such a way that the brain could grow and the skull would heal. The surgery is performed by a neurosurgeon. I'll see if I can find you a link.
It's also called Sagittal Synostosis. Here's a site....
http://www.geocities.com/HotSprings/6751/
SmilingBluEyes
20,964 Posts
It's called
Sagittal Synostosis...and I know a LOT about it. My son was born with it in 1992.
If you have questions that I don't address here, just ask
-----I can probably help you answer a lot of questions, being an OB nurse and mom of a child who was born with this relatively rare condition...
"Synostosis" is a condition whereby the sagittal sutures of the skull of a baby are fused together and there are no fontanels or "soft spots"---
so the head is essentially like an adult head. The newborn's head will be mishapen ----often protruding in the front and back.....to a quite sharp point. The head also will appear elongated due to this. ON CT scan the brain will appear abnormally elongated, too, but RARELY does this condition result in any problem or abnormality of brain function ever.
It IS fixable by craniotomy. It sounds brutal. They neurosurgeons will cut open the baby's skull, remove a small plate of bone and then sew it back up, thus creating a HUGE "soft spot" that will close in due time.
They usually do this surgery on babies of 3-6 months of age, before they walk and move much. Babies recover well, but it is very bloody as you might imagine. My son needed a unit of blood post-op. It's common for that to happen so tell mom/dad to donate blood ahead of time , if possible, for transfusion.
Also, the surgery causes extensive swelling of the face, to the effect where one or both eyes is swelled shut. This is temporary and does not cause as much distress to baby as it does to mom and dad.
I was not a nurse when my son was born with this and had resulting surgery, so very unprepared for his appearance in the PICU afterward. They should have been better about explaining it all to us; I did get quite upset. My son's face was horribly swollen, he had a JP drain and a unit of blood hanging over his crib when I was permitted to see him. I was not prepared well for how bad it would look......but he recovered quickly, breastfeeding again within 24 hours post-op.
My son recovered completely and now is a healthy 11 year old boy. NO lasting effects except a scar along the midline sagittal line of his scalp. He would have looked MONSTROUS if no surgery had been done.
My guess is grandbaby's ped will refer the parents to a neurosurgeon for consult and likely surgery.
If there is anything more I can do or any questions I may answer, please don't hesitate to post here or PM me. I wish your family the best; tell Mom and Dad hang in there. Best wishes!
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above is my reply on the other thread........I guess I posted it in the wrong place. HTH!!!!!! PM me w/questions---having been there and done that I bet I can help!
:kiss
LuvsOB
62 Posts
There is a new procedure with much less blood loss but after the baby wears a helmut for 6 months to a year. I'm not sure the name of the procedure. I could find out if you want to know.
Rapheal
814 Posts
Angelbear,
I have no knowledge of this but want to let you know how sorry I am that your grandson is having this problem. I am praying for a speedy intervention and recovery for him. Keep us posted.
they need a consult w/a neuro asap. i would not want to make a baby wear a helmet at 6 mo to a year myself. have the neuro spell out all possible treatments (including NONE) and let them decide for themselves after being informed properly.
really, the recovery from the craniotomy was NOT that bad!!!! once done, my son was a "normal" baby by all accounts.
BarbPick
780 Posts
I must have been home sick the day this was covered in class, live and learn, I love this BB
it's rare barb...we never covered it in nursing school where i went. it's very rare.
Hey, me and Butterfly McQueen, Ms Scarlett, I don't know nothing bout' birthin' no babies!!!
rofl barb...well me neither...laws, the female BODY know more than I eveah will bout birthin babays.........
have a good one.
BRANDY LPN
408 Posts
SmilingBluEyes-
I questions and Im not trying to sound smart but do you mean the babies head is football shaped? Just trying to get a mental pic in case I ever see one of these kiddos. and at what age are these kids usually dx?
Im glad to hear your son is doing welll.
Angel Bear-
my warmest wishes and prayers to you.