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Factors Correlating Outcome in Young Infants With Congenital Muscular Torticollis  Ji Hwa Ryu, MD, Dong Wook Kim, MD, Seung Ho Kim, MD, Hyun Seok Jung,

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Presentation on theme: "Factors Correlating Outcome in Young Infants With Congenital Muscular Torticollis  Ji Hwa Ryu, MD, Dong Wook Kim, MD, Seung Ho Kim, MD, Hyun Seok Jung,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Factors Correlating Outcome in Young Infants With Congenital Muscular Torticollis 
Ji Hwa Ryu, MD, Dong Wook Kim, MD, Seung Ho Kim, MD, Hyun Seok Jung, MD, Hye Jung Choo, MD, Sun Joo Lee, MD, Young Mi Park, MD, Hye Jin Baek, MD  Canadian Association of Radiologists Journal  Volume 67, Issue 1, Pages (February 2016) DOI: /j.carj Copyright © 2016 Canadian Association of Radiologists Terms and Conditions

2 Figure 1 A 1-month-old infant with complete resolution of congenital muscular torticollis (with physiotherapy). On the transverse image (A) of the initial neck ultrasonography, the left sternocleidomastoid muscle (arrows) shows localized enlargement in the lower third (anteroposterior diameter: 10.3 mm). On the transverse image (B) of the initial neck ultrasonography, the right sternocleidomastoid muscle (arrows) shows normal findings. On the transverse image (C) of the follow-up ultrasonography obtained 4 months after physiotherapy, the congenital muscular torticollis lesion in the left neck (arrows) is no longer observed (anteroposterior diameter: 5.3 mm). Canadian Association of Radiologists Journal  , 82-87DOI: ( /j.carj ) Copyright © 2016 Canadian Association of Radiologists Terms and Conditions

3 Figure 2 A 4-month-old infant with incomplete resolution of congenital muscular torticollis (without physiotherapy). On the transverse image (A) of the initial neck ultrasonography, left sternocleidomastoid muscle (arrows) shows localized enlargement in the lower third (anteroposterior diameter: 11.5 mm). On the transverse image (B) of the initial neck ultrasonography, right sternocleidomastoid muscle (arrows) shows normal findings. On the transverse image (C) of the follow-up ultrasonography obtained 8 months after the initial ultrasonography, congenital muscular torticollis lesion in the left neck (arrows) is still observed despite minimal decrease in the thickness (anteroposterior diameter: 10.8 mm). Canadian Association of Radiologists Journal  , 82-87DOI: ( /j.carj ) Copyright © 2016 Canadian Association of Radiologists Terms and Conditions


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