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Original Article

Magnetic Resonance Imaging in the Assessment of Craniosynostosis

, , &
Pages 293-299 | Received 12 Jul 1991, Published online: 08 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Modern interest in craniosynostosis began when clinicians, regardless of their individual specialty but united in their interest in the problems raised by patients with this condition. first realised that if treatment was confined simply to opening up the fused sutures of the skull vault, success in terms of both function and the restoration of a more normal appearance was likely to be limited. Indeed, the grouping together of such specialists into formal craniofacial units was tacit recognition of this, as was the acceptance that many affected children had evidence of clinical problems that could not be explained on simple mechanical grounds alone.

It is not surprising, therefore, that the advent of any new method of investigation has been welcomed by craniofacial surgeons eager to learn anything that might lead to an improvement in management, particularly of the more complex syndromes.

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