RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Assessment of Follow-Up Sonography and Clinical Improvement among Infants with Congenital Muscular Torticollis JF American Journal of Neuroradiology JO Am. J. Neuroradiol. FD American Society of Neuroradiology DO 10.3174/ajnr.A3299 A1 H.-J. Park A1 S.S. Kim A1 S.-Y. Lee A1 Y.-T. Lee A1 K. Yoon A1 E.-C. Chung A1 M.-H. Rho A1 H.-J. Kwag YR 2012 UL http://www.ajnr.org/content/early/2012/10/04/ajnr.A3299.abstract AB BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Infants grow rapidly, which causes the SCM to thicken physiologically. Therefore some cases of physiologically- thickened SCM can be confused with a poor response to physical therapy. There have been only a few quantitative ultrasonographic studies on the clinical outcome of rehabilitation for CMT. Our aim was to evaluate whether a new sonographic assessment method that uses the muscular thickness ratio of the SCM can help quantify the outcome of rehabilitation therapy for patients with CMT. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We evaluated 48 patients (male/female, 17:31; mean age, 3.9 months) who were diagnosed with CMT and who underwent initial and follow-up sonography. The ratio of the thickness of the involved SCM to the thickness of the intact SCM (SCM thickness ratio) was calculated. A scoring system based on the range of motion of the neck was used to assess clinical improvement. The correlations between clinical improvement and the thickness of the involved muscle, the difference in involved muscle thickness, the SCM thickness ratio, and the difference in the SCM thickness ratio were evaluated with Spearman rank correlations. RESULTS: Follow-up Cheng scores were higher than initial scores; this difference indicates clinical resolution (follow-up, 4.90; initial, 3.38). The SCM thickness ratio at follow-up was lower than that at the initial evaluation (follow-up, 1.29 –1.34; initial, 1.65–1.77). Intra- and interobserver agreements were excellent. Most variables were moderately correlated with clinical improvement (correlation coefficients, 0.36–0.509). R1 showed the highest correlation with clinical improvement (0.481 and 0.509), followed by the initial maximal thickness of the SCM (0.434 and 0.488). ΔP (P1–P2) and ΔR showed similar correlation coefficients with clinical improvement. CONCLUSIONS: Measurement of the SCM thickness ratio appears to overcome the problem of a false-positive diagnosis of clinical aggravation of CMT resulting from physiologic growth. R1 and ΔR are accurate objective measurements, which can be used in the management of CMT. Abbreviations CMTcongenital muscular torticollisP1, 2initial and follow-up maximal thickness of the SCMR1, 2initial and follow-up SCM thickness ratioSCMsternocleidomastoid muscle