Assessing Facial Asymmetry in Postoperative Patients With Unilateral Coronal Craniosynostosis.

2020 
BACKGROUND: Despite surgical correction of unilateral craniosynostosis (ULC), complex cranial base angulation can result in partial reversion to preoperative deformity with growth and time. Using 3-dimensional imaging, dysmorphic facial features of ULC in school-age patients were quantified and related to how they contribute to overall facial asymmetry and patient-reported outcomes. METHODS: Children who underwent surgical correction of ULC were recruited from Yale University and Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. The 3D photographs were analyzed utilizing a Procrustes analysis of shape. Pearson's correlation was used to determine dysmorphic features' impact on overall asymmetry. Patients were stratified into "moderate" and "severe" asymmetry. Finally, asymmetry was correlated to patient-reported outcome scores. Statistical analysis was performed with SPSS-25 with P < 0.05 as statistically significant. RESULTS: Twenty-one patients were included with average age at analysis of 12.3 years. Fifty-seven percent of patients had right-sided fusion. The overall Procrustes analysis indicated a root mean square difference of 2.21 mm. Pearson's correlation indicated that the facial middle 3rd (P
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