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Reshaping Lives: Device helps heal babies heads

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Laurie Robinett noticed a flatness to her son’s head as soon as he was born.

She thinks her son Jackson might have stayed in the same position in the womb much of the time.

“He was a matter of weeks old, and we were already giving him tummy time and doing anything and everything to try to reform the head,” said Robinett, of Woodstock.

Nothing seemed to work.

So the family eventually ended up in Patrick Flanagan’s office.

Flanagan, an orthotist at Mercy Woodstock Medical Center, fitted Jackson with a sort of helmet designed to treat head shape abnormalities.

Jackson began wearing the helmet, called a Star Cranial Remolding Orthosis, at 9 months old. After about four months, his head had been reshaped.

Now 3 years old, Jackson has little memory of the experience.

“I play football?” he asked his mother as he picked up the helmet the other day.

“I don’t think it’s going to fit you anymore,” she responded with a laugh.

The Robinetts are among a growing number of families turning to the treatment.

“Flatheadedness,” or positional plagiocephaly as it’s described by doctors, can be an unintended consequence of a campaign that began in 1992. At that time, the American Academy of Pediatrics urged parents to lay newborns on their backs to prevent sudden infant death syndrome.

And shortly after that, pediatricians were urged to take a closer look at the shape of children’s heads.

Dr. Patrick Phelan, a pediatrician with Mercy Woodstock Medical Center who referred the Robinetts to Flanagan, said up to one out of every 10 of his patients now have head shape abnormalities.
The parents are encouraged to increase the child’s tummy time, or time spent lying on the stomach playing, he said. Some of the children with tight neck muscles take part in physical therapy, he said.

Depending on the severity of the deformity and the effectiveness of the treatment, many of the children also are referred to an orthotist.

If the deformity is severe enough, it can affect a child’s jaw, causing problems, such as TMJ, temporomandibular joint disorders, or basically, pain in the jaw.

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