Clinical Study of Cerebral Palsy at THQ Hospital, Liaqatpur.
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.21649/akemu.v11i2.4232Keywords:
Cerebral palsy, mental retardation, epilepsy, birth asphyxiaAbstract
Eighty Children diagnosed as cerebral palsy were included in this study. Male to female ratio was 3.2: 1. 10% belonged to 3-12 months, 48.8% to 1-6 years, 35% to +6-12 years and 6.2% to age group +12-16 years. The chief complaint was motor problems in 38.75%, epilepsy in 33.75%, fever in 13.75%, aggressive behaviour in 5%, poor school performance in 1.25%, convulsions (first episode) in 5% and irritability in 2.5% cases. 77.5% children were quadriplegic, 18.75% hemiplegic and 335% diplegic. 68.75% children were spastic, 3.75% ataxic, 6.25% dyskinetic, 16.25% dystonic and 5% choreoathetotic. The complications noted were epilepsy in 51.25%, mental retardation in 56.25%, speech problems in 25%, behaviour problems in 35%, under nutrition in 3 8.75%, poor school performance in 35%, feeding problems in 27.5%, decreased vision and squint in 12.5%, decreased hearing in 6.25%, caries teeth in 8.75%, orthopedic and positional disorders in 6.25%, constipation in 8.75% and growth retardation of one limb in 3.75% cases. The most probable age of origin was prenatal and natal in 80% and postnatal in 20% cases. The risk factors involved in cerebral palsy originating in prenatal or natal period were one in 20.31% cases, two in 31.25%, more than two in 32.81% and no in 15.63% cases. The three most important prenatal and natal factors were maternal age (12.93%), birth asphyxia (15.5%) and low birth weight (12.07%).The postnatal causes were neonatal jaundice in 25%, CNS insults in 62.5% and trauma in 12.5% cases. Conclusion: Cerebral palsy has diversity of presentations with associated multiple problems and its etiology is difficult to diagnose.Downloads
Published
01/19/2021
How to Cite
REHMAN, A. ., KHAN, M. A. ., FAYYAZ, M. ., MUSHTAQ, M. ., ASHRAF, M. ., & IQBAL, M. S. . (2021). Clinical Study of Cerebral Palsy at THQ Hospital, Liaqatpur. Annals of King Edward Medical University, 11(2), 74–76. https://doi.org/10.21649/akemu.v11i2.4232
Issue
Section
Research Articles
License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
This is an open-access journal and all the published articles / items are distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. For comments publications@kemu.edu.pk