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. 2022 Nov;58(11):1929-1934.
doi: 10.1111/jpc.16186. Epub 2022 Sep 6.

Making waves: The changing tide of cerebral palsy

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Making waves: The changing tide of cerebral palsy

Monica S Cooper et al. J Paediatr Child Health. 2022 Nov.

Abstract

Cerebral palsy (CP) is a broad diagnosis unbound by aetiology and is based on a clinical examination demonstrating abnormalities of movement or posture. CP represents a static neurological condition, provided that neurodegenerative conditions, leukoencephalopathies and neuromuscular disorders are excluded. In paediatrics, the genetic conditions associated with CP are rapidly increasing, with primary and overlapping neurodevelopmental conditions perhaps better categorised by the predominant clinical feature such as CP, intellectual disability, autism spectrum disorder or epilepsy. Progress in molecular genetics may challenge what constitutes CP, but a genetic diagnosis does not negate the CP diagnosis. As clinicians working in the field, we discuss the changing tide of CP. Neuroimaging provides essential information through pattern recognition and demonstration of static brain changes. We present examples of children where a layered clinical diagnosis or dual aetiologies are appropriate. We also present examples of children with genetic causes of CP to highlight the challenges and limitations of neuroimaging to provide an aetiological diagnosis. In consultation with a geneticist, access to genomic testing (exome or genome sequencing) is now available in Australia under Medicare billing for children under the age of 10 with dysmorphic features, one or more major structural organ anomalies, (an evolving) intellectual disability or global developmental delay. We encourage the uptake of genomic testing in CP, because it can be difficult to tell whether a child has an environmental or genetic cause for CP. A specific genetic diagnosis may change patient management, reduce guilt and enable more distinctive research in the future to assist with understanding disease mechanisms.

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Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Hypothesis of aetiologies cerebral palsy. This figure shows that cerebral palsy may be caused by a pathogenic variant, an environmental injury or both.
Fig. 2
Fig. 2
Neuroimages associated with examples of likely genetic causes of cerebral palsy. Neuroimages of patient number 1–6 which correspond to Table 1.

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