Airways and craniofacial assessment in children affected by achondroplasia with and without sleep-disordered breathing: quantitative magnetic resonance study.
Rosalinda CalandrelliFabio PilatoGabriella D'ApolitoLorenzo TenoreRoberta OnesimoChiara LeoniGiuseppe ZampinoCesare ColosimoPublished in: Child's nervous system : ChNS : official journal of the International Society for Pediatric Neurosurgery (2022)
In children with achondroplasia, multifaced craniofacial abnormalities contribute to airways volume reduction predisposing to sleep disordered breathing. MRI-based quantitative assessment allows the appraisal of craniofacial variables linked to the development of sleep-disordered breathing such as FM stenosis, jugular and hypoglossal foramina stenosis, and retruded maxillary position and may be a valuable tool for clinical surveillance.