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About Face
Treating Positional Plagiocephaly
By Teri Brown
When Rachel Manias' husband first noticed the facial disparities in their baby, they had never heard of positional plagiocephaly. Their son, Dane, had been taken to the neonatal intensive care unit shortly after birth due to apnic attacks. He was later diagnosed with reflux, the cause of his attacks. While in the NICU, the Maniases were told to lay him on his right side because he would be more comfortable that way.
"My husband noticed the facial asymmetry at about six weeks," says Manias, an Ohio mother of two. "I thought he just looked that way from being squished at birth and it would be fine in a few more weeks. But when he was diagnosed with plagiocephaly, we went through his birth pictures and noticed that he didn't look that way when he was born."
Positional plagiocephaly is a condition in which the back or one side of the back of an infant's head is flattened due to the infant spending a lot of time lying on his or her back. Normal growth of the skull in that area is restricted because of the persistent, chronic pressure of lying on that area. The skull bone of an infant is very malleable and easily deformed.
"He did improve, but we weren't satisfied because of the facial and ear asymmetry," says Manias. "We decided to get a DOC (dynamic orthotic cranioplasty) band. We knew the best results are achieved when children are banded in the early months."
Plagiocephaly is rarely serious and, as the Maniases found out, easily remedied, even if the child does have to wear a band, a therapeutic helmet-like device designed to reshape the child's head over a period of time.
The complications of this condition are generally cosmetic, according to Dr. Lewis First, Chief of Pediatrics at Vermont Children's Hospital at Fletcher Allen Health Care and Professor of Pediatrics, University of Vermont College of Medicine.
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