Full Text Available

Note: Clicking the button above will open the full text document at the original institutional repository in a new window.

The development of posture in very low birthweight infants (<1500 grams)

The aims of the study were to examine postural development in very low birthweight and normal birthweight infants and to determine whether deviant postures were predictive of adverse neurodevelopmental outcome. In the first part of the study the 7 postural responses selected by Vojta to evaluate neu...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Magasiner, Vivien Adele
Other Authors: Molteno, Christopher D
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Division of Physiotherapy 2017
Subjects:
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867613324865175552
access_status_str Open Access
author Magasiner, Vivien Adele
author2 Molteno, Christopher D
author_browse Magasiner, Vivien Adele
Molteno, Christopher D
author_facet Molteno, Christopher D
Magasiner, Vivien Adele
author_sort Magasiner, Vivien Adele
collection Thesis
description The aims of the study were to examine postural development in very low birthweight and normal birthweight infants and to determine whether deviant postures were predictive of adverse neurodevelopmental outcome. In the first part of the study the 7 postural responses selected by Vojta to evaluate neuromotor development were applied to 69 very low birthweight (VLBW < 1 500 grams) infants and to 28 healthy full-term infants of normal birthweight (> 2500 grams). Of the 69 VLBW infants, 43 were small for gestational age and 26 appropriate for gestational age. All infants were examined at term and 4 months corrected age. They were all later assessed on the Griffiths Mental Development Scale at 12 and 18 months corrected age. There were significant differences in postural reactions between the 2 groups which confirmed the lower tone and greater extension previously described in VLBW infants. An important finding in the study was that poor head and trunk righting noted at 4 months corrected age in VLBW infants, was associated with less developed locomotion at 12 and 18 months as assessed by the Griffiths Mental Development Scale. Thus, a delay in maturation in VLBW infants which was apparent from the assessment of postural responses was still identifiable on the locomotor sub-scales at 12 and 18 months. Five of Vojta's responses were shown to be useful as part of the neurological assessment of high risk infants. In the second part of the study, the 5 useful Vojta responses were incorporated into the Infant Neurodevelopmental Assessment (INA) which was used to assess 76 high risk VLBW infants. The 76 infants consisted of 34 infants with intracranial lesions on ultrasound and 42 without intracranial lesions. All infants were assessed at term and 4 % months corrected age using the INA. At 12 months corrected age they were all assessed on the Griffiths Mental Development Scale. Six infants were diagnosed as having cerebral palsy, all of whom had intracranial lesions. Several clinical signs indicative of cerebral palsy were significant at 4 % months corrected age and will be useful in future studies to diagnose cerebral palsy early. The association between lack of head and trunk control at 4 % months corrected age and a lower locomotor score at 12 months corrected age proved to be significant again and reinforces the finding that early delay in maturation is identifiable on the locomotor scale at 12 months corrected age.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/26598
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:34:20.437Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2017
publishDateRange 2017
publishDateSort 2017
publisher Division of Physiotherapy
publisherStr Division of Physiotherapy
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/26598 The development of posture in very low birthweight infants (<1500 grams) Magasiner, Vivien Adele Molteno, Christopher D Malan, A Posture Infant, Low birth weight Physiotherapy The aims of the study were to examine postural development in very low birthweight and normal birthweight infants and to determine whether deviant postures were predictive of adverse neurodevelopmental outcome. In the first part of the study the 7 postural responses selected by Vojta to evaluate neuromotor development were applied to 69 very low birthweight (VLBW < 1 500 grams) infants and to 28 healthy full-term infants of normal birthweight (> 2500 grams). Of the 69 VLBW infants, 43 were small for gestational age and 26 appropriate for gestational age. All infants were examined at term and 4 months corrected age. They were all later assessed on the Griffiths Mental Development Scale at 12 and 18 months corrected age. There were significant differences in postural reactions between the 2 groups which confirmed the lower tone and greater extension previously described in VLBW infants. An important finding in the study was that poor head and trunk righting noted at 4 months corrected age in VLBW infants, was associated with less developed locomotion at 12 and 18 months as assessed by the Griffiths Mental Development Scale. Thus, a delay in maturation in VLBW infants which was apparent from the assessment of postural responses was still identifiable on the locomotor sub-scales at 12 and 18 months. Five of Vojta's responses were shown to be useful as part of the neurological assessment of high risk infants. In the second part of the study, the 5 useful Vojta responses were incorporated into the Infant Neurodevelopmental Assessment (INA) which was used to assess 76 high risk VLBW infants. The 76 infants consisted of 34 infants with intracranial lesions on ultrasound and 42 without intracranial lesions. All infants were assessed at term and 4 % months corrected age using the INA. At 12 months corrected age they were all assessed on the Griffiths Mental Development Scale. Six infants were diagnosed as having cerebral palsy, all of whom had intracranial lesions. Several clinical signs indicative of cerebral palsy were significant at 4 % months corrected age and will be useful in future studies to diagnose cerebral palsy early. The association between lack of head and trunk control at 4 % months corrected age and a lower locomotor score at 12 months corrected age proved to be significant again and reinforces the finding that early delay in maturation is identifiable on the locomotor scale at 12 months corrected age. 2017-12-13T14:15:00Z 2017-12-13T14:15:00Z 1993 Master Thesis Masters MSc (Med) http://hdl.handle.net/11427/26598 eng application/pdf application/pdf Division of Physiotherapy Faculty of Health Sciences University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Posture
Infant, Low birth weight
Physiotherapy
Magasiner, Vivien Adele
The development of posture in very low birthweight infants (<1500 grams)
thesis_degree_str Master's
title The development of posture in very low birthweight infants (<1500 grams)
title_full The development of posture in very low birthweight infants (<1500 grams)
title_fullStr The development of posture in very low birthweight infants (<1500 grams)
title_full_unstemmed The development of posture in very low birthweight infants (<1500 grams)
title_short The development of posture in very low birthweight infants (<1500 grams)
title_sort development of posture in very low birthweight infants 1500 grams
topic Posture
Infant, Low birth weight
Physiotherapy
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/26598
work_keys_str_mv AT magasinervivienadele thedevelopmentofpostureinverylowbirthweightinfants1500grams
AT magasinervivienadele developmentofpostureinverylowbirthweightinfants1500grams