RESUMEN
A five-year-old boy with Crouzon Syndrome, short stature, and delayed bone age was found to have partial growth hormone deficiency. Accelerated growth was observed after human growth hormone replacement. Children with Crouzon Syndrome should be followed closely for all growth parameters, not just head circumference.
Asunto(s)
Disostosis Craneofacial/complicaciones , Craneosinostosis/complicaciones , Hormona del Crecimiento/deficiencia , Adulto , Humanos , MasculinoRESUMEN
Planning of service delivery systems for children with special health care needs would be enhanced by knowledge of numbers of cases anticipated in defined geographic areas. A method is described for predicting numbers of children who will likely have mental retardation sufficient to require special education services, based on the birth prevalence of birth defects and clinicians' estimates of the likelihood of mental retardation associated with each specific birth defect. This method is applied to the 1980-82 birth cohort of a 28-county area of south and central Arkansas, and it is compared with special education enrollment data for children ages 6 to 8 in academic year 1988-89. According to this estimate, children with birth defects may account for 32 to 56 percent of the cases of mental retardation among 6- to 8-year-olds reported by the public schools.