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Uncertainties regarding cerebral palsy diagnosis: opportunities to operationalize the consensus definition.

Bhooma R AravamuthanDarcy L FehlingsIona NovakPaul H GrossNoor AlyasiriAnn H TiltonMichael I ShevellMichael Collingwood FaheyMichael Kruer
Published in: medRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences (2023)
We propose that the uncertainties we identified could be addressed by operationalizing the 2006 consensus definition to support a more uniform CP diagnosis. To address the most common CP diagnostic uncertainties we identified, we propose 3 points of clarification based on the available literature: 1) Motor symptoms/signs should be present by 2 years old; 2) CP can and should be diagnosed as early as possible, even if activity limitation is not yet present, if motor symptoms/signs can be reasonably predicted to yield activity limitation (e.g. by using standardized examination instruments, Brain MRI, and a suggestive clinical history); and 3) The clinical motor disability phenotype should be non-progressive through 5 years old. We anticipate that operationalizing the 2006 definition of CP in this manner could clarify the uncertainties we identified among child neurologists and neurodevelopmentalists and reduce the diagnostic variability that currently exists.
Keyphrases
  • cerebral palsy
  • multiple sclerosis
  • systematic review
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • mental health
  • clinical practice
  • white matter
  • sleep quality
  • contrast enhanced
  • physical activity
  • diffusion weighted imaging