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Review
. 2010 Jun-Jul;166(6-7):565-73.
doi: 10.1016/j.neurol.2009.12.006. Epub 2010 Feb 8.

[New developments in spastic unilateral cerebral palsy]

[Article in French]
Affiliations
Review

[New developments in spastic unilateral cerebral palsy]

[Article in French]
S Chabrier et al. Rev Neurol (Paris). 2010 Jun-Jul.

Abstract

Introduction: Hemiplegic (or spastic unilateral) cerebral palsy accounts for about 30% of all cases of cerebral palsy. With a population prevalence of 0.6 per 1000 live births, it is the most common type of cerebral palsy among term-born children and the second most common type after diplegia among preterm infants.

State of the art: Many types of prenatal and perinatal brain injury can lead to congenital hemiplegia and brain MRI is the most useful tool to classify them with accuracy and to provide early prognostic information. Perinatal arterial ischemic stroke thus appears as the leading cause in term infants, whereas encephalopathy of prematurity is the most common cause in premature babies. Other causes include brain malformations, neonatal sinovenous thrombosis, parenchymal hemorrhage (for example due to coagulopathy or alloimmune thrombocytopenia) and the more recently described familial forms of porencephaly associated with mutations in the COL4A1 gene.

Perspectives: In adjunction with pharmacologic treatment (botulinium neurotoxin injection), new evidence-based rehabilitational interventions, such as constraint-induced movement therapy and mirror therapy, are increasingly being used.

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