EPIDEMIOLOGIC AND SURGICAL APPROACH OF CRANYOSYNOSTOSIS: CASE OF MADAGASCAR AND REVIEW OF LITERATURE

Authors

  • Bemora Joseph Synèse Service de Neurochirurgie Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Antananarivo Hôpital Joseph Ravoahangy Andrianavalona (CHU-JRA) Antananarivo Madagascar Author
  • Rakotondrainibe Willy Francis Service de Neurochirurgie Centre Hospitalier Universitaire (CHU P ZAGA) Université de Mahajanga Madagascar Author
  • Andrianaivo Radotiana Tony Service de Neurochirurgie Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Antananarivo Hôpital Joseph Ravoahangy Andrianavalona (CHU-JRA) Antananarivo Madagascar Author
  • Ratovondrainy Willy Service de Neurochirurgie Centre Hospitalier de Soavinandriana Antananarivo Madagascar Author
  • Rabararijaona Mamiarisoa Service de Neurochirurgie Centre Hospitalier Universitaire (CHU Tambohobe) de Fianarantsoa Madagascar Author
  • Andriamamonjy Clément Service de Neurochirurgie Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Antananarivo Hôpital Joseph Ravoahangy Andrianavalona (CHU-JRA) Antananarivo Madagascar Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.53555/nnmhs.v5i9.793

Keywords:

Craniosynostosis, surgery, Madagascar, transfusion

Abstract

Introduction: Craniosynostosis is a premature closure of one or more sutures of the skull. She reaches 1 child out of 2100. She is responsible for a psychomotor developmental delay. The objective of this study was to define epidemiology, surgical approach and compare with literature. 

Methods: this was a multicenter retrospective descriptive study performed in hospitalized children operated or not on three neurosurgery centers (CHU-JRA, CENHOSOA and Fianarantsoa), from January 2010 to December 2017. Variables studied: epidemiology, clinical, paraclinical and therapeutic. 

Results: During the targeted period, 52 children had craniosynostosis (4 cases at CENHSOA, 6 at Fianarantsoa and 42 at CHUA-HJRA). There was a clear male predominance with a sex ratio of 2.4. The average age was 13.11 months. Several types of craniosynostosis were reported, the majority of which were dominated by brachycephaly in 40.38% followed by scaphocephalia (21.15%) and 2 cases of Apert Syndrome. The main symptom was delayed psychomotor development (34.46%). A standard radiography of the skull required in 76.92% and a scanner in 15.38% of the cases. The average age at surgery was 13.04 months. The majority of the surgical techniques practiced were a suturotomy, with blood transfusion and the majority of which at the time of the incision.  

Conclusion: Craniosynostosis is a pathology that requires neurosurgical management. Several operative techniques exist but the indication depends on the age and the clinicoradiological aspect of the pathology. The main cause of death is related to intraoperative bleeding. 

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Published

2019-09-30

How to Cite

Synèse, B. J., Francis , R. W., Tony, A. R., Willy, R., Mamiarisoa, R., & Clément, A. (2019). EPIDEMIOLOGIC AND SURGICAL APPROACH OF CRANYOSYNOSTOSIS: CASE OF MADAGASCAR AND REVIEW OF LITERATURE . Journal of Advanced Research in Medical and Health Science (ISSN 2208-2425), 5(9), 1-6. https://doi.org/10.53555/nnmhs.v5i9.793

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