Three-dimensional Analysis of Facial Asymmetry in Unilateral Lambdoid Craniosynostosis

Unilateral lambdoid synostosis (ULS) is characterized by occipital flattening, mastoid bulging, and contralateral parietal bossing. Anterior craniofacial features are less well-defined. This study utilizes volumetric, craniometric, and composite heat maps of three-dimensional (3D) rendered CT scans...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inThe Cleft palate-craniofacial journal p. 10556656231176876
Main Authors Harrison, Lucas M, Ferrari, Eliza J, Mathew, Denzil P, Derderian, Christopher A, Hallac, Rami R
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 17.05.2023
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Summary:Unilateral lambdoid synostosis (ULS) is characterized by occipital flattening, mastoid bulging, and contralateral parietal bossing. Anterior craniofacial features are less well-defined. This study utilizes volumetric, craniometric, and composite heat maps of three-dimensional (3D) rendered CT scans to analyze anterior craniofacial asymmetry in ULS and compared to controls. A retrospective review of three-dimensional CT scans. Tertiary care pediatric institution. 30 ULS and 30 control patients. Volumetric and craniometric analysis of the anterior fossa, orbits, zygomas, maxilla, and mandible was performed. The anterior fossa volume was greater bilaterally (0.047, 0.038), and the fossa angle was more anterior contralaterally (<0.001) and more anterior bilaterally than controls (0.038, 0.033). The orbits had greater height and lesser depth bilaterally compared to controls (0.006, 0.009; < 0.001, < 0.001). Zygoma length was significantly greater on the contralateral side than controls (0.048; < 0.001). Nasal contralateral deviation of 3.57  ±  1.97°. The maxillary length was longer on the contralateral side (0.045). The mandibular angle was more anterior on the ipsilateral side and posterior on the contralateral side (<0.001) compared to controls (0.042, < 0.001). Chin had a contralateral deviation of 1.04  ±  3.74°. ULS has significant asymmetry in the anterior craniofacial skeleton. There is a bilateral expansion of the anterior cranial fossa with greater frontal bossing on the contralateral side. Increased orbital height and decreased depth. Contralateral zygomatic and mandibular body lengthening with posterior mandibular deviation. These features may provide more effective diagnosis and potential clinical management strategies.
ISSN:1545-1569
DOI:10.1177/10556656231176876