SUMMARY
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Cerebral Palsy is a common congenital condition caused by injury to the immature brain that leads to upper motor neuron disease and presents with cognitive and musculoskeletal manifestations of varying severity.
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Diagnosis is made clinically with evaluation of developmental milestones, cognitive function, and musculoskeletal abnormalities including spasticity, loss of motor control, and impaired balance.
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Treatment involves a multidisciplinary approach to address spasticity, orthopedic manifestations, and cognitive function.
EPIDEMIOLOGY
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Incidence
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2-3 per 1000
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Demographics
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by definition onset must be before first two years of life, although diagnosis may be delayed in very mild cases
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most common cause of chronic childhood disability
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ETIOLOGY
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Nonprogressive upper motor neuron disease (static encephalopathy) due to injury to immature brain
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orthopaedic manifestations
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contractures (this topic)
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fractures (this topic)
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upper extremity deformities
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hip subluxation and dislocation
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spinal deformity
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foot deformities
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gait disorders
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Pathophysiology
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pathoanatomy
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leads to muscle imbalance with a mixture of weakness and spasticity
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the encephalopathy is static while the affected portion of the musculoskeletal system changes with growth
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risk factors
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prematurity (most common)
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anoxic injuries
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prenatal intrauterine factors
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perinatal infections
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toxoplasmosis
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rubella
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cytomegalovirus infection
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herpes simplex
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ToRCH
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meningitis
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brain malformations
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brain trauma - NAT
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Associated conditions
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orthopaedic manifestations characteristic of CP
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primary
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abnormal tone
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loss of motor control
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impaired balance
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spasticity
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(hypotonia)
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(dyskenesias such as chorea and athetosis)
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secondary (growth and spasticity related)
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contractures
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starts as dynamic contractures, become static with time (continuous muscle contraction results in shortening) and growth (growth of bones occurs at a faster longitudinal rate than muscles in spastic cerebral palsy)
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upper extremity deformities
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hip subluxation and dislocation
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spinal deformity
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foot deformities
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gait disorders
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fractures
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often associated with non-ambulators secondary to low bone mineral density
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bisphosphonates may be useful
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IV pamidronate considered with >3 fractures and a DEXA z-score <2 SD
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EVALUATION
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History
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clinical history
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perinatal history
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growth & development
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prior medical treatments
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- functional status
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sitting/standing posture
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upper and lower extremities function
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communication skills
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acuity of hearing and vision
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Physical exam
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general musculoskeletal exam
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motion, tone, and strength
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Rotational limb profiles for torsional deformities
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gait
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gait lab analysis
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plantigrade feet
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crouch
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stiff knee gait
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spine exam
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presence and flexibility of scoliosis
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spinal balance and shoulder height
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pelvic obliquity
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resting head posture
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hamstring contractures (lead to decreased lumbar lordosis)
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hips
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hip contractures
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flexion contracture (lead to excessive lumbar lordosis)
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adduction contracture
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hip instability and dislocations are common, may be looked over as a contracture alone
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observe thigh length in sitting, leg length when supine, or galleazzi test
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adductor contracture can make examination difficult
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foot and ankle
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equinovarus and planovalgus deformities common
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observe wear patterns, callouses
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note hypertonicity
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toe walking or absent heel strike during gait secondary to gastrosoleus spasticity and contracture
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may hyperextend knee to obtain heel contact
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provacative Silverskiold test to differentiate gastrocnemius contracture vs achilles contracture
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IMAGING
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Radiographs
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standard radiographs should include
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AP and lateral of hips
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standing spine radiographs as baseline
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MRI
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MRI of brain shows a spectrum of changes including
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periventricular leukomalacia (PVL) white matter lesions most frequent (56%)
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while grey matter lesions (18%)
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brain malformations are less frequent (9%)
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TREATMENT SPASTICITY & DEFORMITY
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Nonoperative
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physical therapy, bracing/orthotics, medications for spasticity
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spasticity control
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Botox (botulinum - A toxin)
- competitive inhibitor of presynaptic cholinergic receptors with a finite lifetime (usually lasts 2-3 months)
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used to maintain joint motion during rapid growth when a child is too young for surgery
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often injected into gastrocnemius
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helpful treatment in dynamic contractures; little benefit with static contractures
- competitive inhibitor of presynaptic cholinergic receptors with a finite lifetime (usually lasts 2-3 months)
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baclofen
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reduces tone via unknown mechanism
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thought to act as GABA agonist
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intra-thecal administration is preferred route to avoid cognitive impairment seen with oral administration (poor bioavailability leads to difficulty with oral dosing)
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Intra-thecal baclofen tends to be used for non-ambulatory CP (GMFCS IV and V)
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side effects
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baclofen withdrawal
- can cause severe fevers, hyperkalemia, and elevated CPK levels
- can cause severe fevers, hyperkalemia, and elevated CPK levels
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Operative
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soft tissue procedures/releases
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indications
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to improve function in child from 3-5 years of age with spasticity and voluntary muscle control
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techniques
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tenotomies for continuously active muscles (e.g. hip adductor)
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tendon lengthening for continuously active muscles (e.g. achilles tendon or hamstring)
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tendon transfers for muscles firing out of phase (e.g. rectus tendon or tibialis posterior)
- tendon transfers in the upper extremity show the best improvement in function in patients with voluntary motor control
- tendon transfers in the upper extremity show the best improvement in function in patients with voluntary motor control
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selective dorsal rhizotomy
- indications
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ages 4 to 8, ambulatory spastic diplegia, and a stable gait pattern that is limited by lower extremity spasticity
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neurosurgical resection of dorsal rootlets that do not show a myographic or clinical response to stimulation
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contraindications
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athetoid CP
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nonambulatory patients with spastic quadriplegia (associated with significant spinal deformities)
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falling out of favor due to limited functional gains and no reduced risk of subsequent musculoskeletal surgeries
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bony procedures/deformity correction
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indications
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usually performed in later childhood / adolescence
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static contractures, progressive joint breakdown, and certain patterned gait-deterioration can be treated with combinations of myotendonous unit lengthening, tendon transfers, and osteotomies
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SEMLS surgery (Single-Event, Multi-Level Surgery)
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concept arose to limit multiple surgeries, anesthetics, and rehabilitation time for children
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most successful when combined with a thorough gait lab assessment that predicts improvemenet in function with multiple level surgical interventions
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simple lengthenings can cause deterioration in gait when other contractures are "uncovered"; SEMLS management seeks to avoid these iatrogenic complications
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can be done on bilateral lower extremities in efforts to improve gait
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specific procedures
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see Cerebral Palsy Upper Extremity Conditions
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see Cerebral Palsy Spine Conditions
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see Cerebral Palsy Hip Conditions
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see Cerebral Palsy Gait Disorders
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see Cerebral Palsy Foot Disorders
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PROGNOSIS
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Most reliable predictor for ability to walk is independent sitting by age 2