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Childhood Hypertonia Cerebral Palsy

The Facts:

For every 1000 children born there is a .015%-0.5% chance that a birth injury will affect the child's nervous system and cause cebral palsy (medically known as a static encephalopathy). Approximately 50% of these children will develop spastic cerebral palsy while another 25% will have a mixed cerebral palsy with a spastic component.

A number of other sources of injury to infants and young children can also result in a fixed dysfunction or permanent impairment of the nervous system. They include:

Any of these can result in static childhood spasticity. Progressive spasticity may be seen with degenerative encephalopathies (e.g., leukodystrophies) and tethered spinal cords as can occur with spinal dysraphisms.

Spasticity may be present in one of three forms in these children;

Children born before 32 weeks gestation with a static encephalopathy will typically develop a spastic diplegia, or spasticity primarily in legs, while those born closer to term with a static encephalopathy will show a spastic quadriplegia pattern which impact all four limbs. Children showing a spastic hemiplegia, or a one-sided spasticity typically have a perinatal history of a grade IV intraventricular hemorrhage with the portion of the blood clot reaching brain tissue causing an injury. More recently an increasing number of young children who have sustained an injury to their nervous system around the time of birth are presenting with mixed forms of cerebral palsy with more than one type of muscle tightness being present.