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A new approach to the Correction of Head Tilt in Congenital Muscular Torticollis.
Authors: Sylvia Cottrill-Mosterman, B.Sc.O.T, O.T.R., O.T.(C)
Carole Jacques, B.S.R., O.T. (C)
Doreen Bartlett, B.Sc., P.T., R.P.T.
Richard Beauchamp, M.D., F.R.C.S. (C)
Abstract:
A number of cervical orthoses
have been designed to augment the stretching exercises usually
recommended as conservative therapy and/or post-operative support for
children with congenital muscular torticollis. The majority of orthoses
are passive in nature and many are awkward and heavy. The Tubular
Orthosis for Torticollis was designed to overcome these disadvantages.
It consists of a circle of soft PVC tubing doubled over and fastened
posteriorly. Short, rigid tubes span the tubing anterior and posterior
to the angle of the mandible on the affected side. The child moves away
from the pressure that the rigid tubes exert on his head only when he
holds his head in the undesirable tilted position. The child must
actively correct his head posture toward the midline position in order
to be comfortable. The TOT Collar takes approximately thirty minutes to
fabricate and fit, and is readily adjustable, lightweight, inexpensive
and unobtrusive. A prospective randomized study comparing children
treated with stretching exercises and TOT (n=6) and a control group
treated with stretching exercises alone (n=4) showed a clinically
significant difference in the amount of residual head tilt following
six months of treatment. The TOT Collargroup had a mean improvement of
8.5 degrees, while the control group had a mean improvement of 3.9
degrees. An objective quantifiable method of measuring head tilt using
photographs and a digitization software program, was developed to
evaluate and compare the two groups. Discussion
The
residual head tilt apparent after conservative treatment may be a
consequence of the small amount of time a child receives proper head
posture training (approximately 8 hours per week versus the large
balance of time he spends with his head in the abnormal “torticollis
position”. Righting reactions, vestibular and ocular reflexes are
modified by feedback from the external environment. Stretching
exercises may gradually correct the muscle length, but do not provide
sufficient stimulus to change an affected child’s established abnormal
perception of the horizontal plain, and thus does not restore proper
head posture. We hypothesize that the TOT Collar
provides new data, and therefore a stimulus for change to the reflex
system. The child must actively correct his head posture to true normal
in order to be comfortable. As the child is maintained in this new
position for long periods of time, his nervous system receives
extensive new data. This enables him to gradually reset his
perception of the horizontal plane and thus attain proper head posture.
This approach supports the active correction techniques advocated by
most authors (5, 12, 13, 14). The Head Tilt
Measurement developed for the TOT Collar Study provides a simple
tool for clinicians to use in the ongoing evaluation of current
treatment or the development of new treatments for CMT. Inter-observer
error is minimized and progress can be measured accurately. One
disadvantage of the Head Tilt Measurement is that sitting in the corner
seat tends to make the subject upset, and therefore difficult to
photograph well. This would probably be true of any seat in which the
child is not allowed to move freely, and is compensated for by taking a
series of photographs and averaging the results of the acceptable
photographs. The alternative of seating the child on the therapist’s or
the mother’s lap was considered but rejected because of the difficulty
of achieving consistent, reproducible positioning. It has been
suggested that pelvic rather than thoracic support may be less
upsetting to children while allowing them to adopt their habitual head
posture. This will be the subject of a future study. Although
the study group was small, the clear difference between the outcome in
the two groups suggests that the TOT Collar can decrease the child to
change his perception of head tilt. The TOT Collar is now in use for
many patients with CMT at BCCH, and ongoing data, including follow-up
data on the original study group is being collected.
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