Proserpina
Mother of Dragons
- Joined
- Nov 16, 2012
- Messages
- 1,219
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My son (who is 7 wks + 1 day today) has a teeny, tiny, barely-there anterior fontanel. I can barely feel it with my pinkie tip. Our doctor finds it "likely" that he has craniosynostosis, so my son is seeing a neurosurgeon on Thursday, hopefully for an X-Ray to confirm or deny.
So far the disappearing fontanel is the only sign of this condition. His head is perfectly round, no sign of "ridges" in his skull or premature sutures. I know from Googling around that the anterior fontanel closes by 3 months for about 1 out of 100 babies (vs. craniosynostosis affecting 1 out of 2000 to 2500 births). I also know that craniosynostosis is usually apparent at birth, but for a very small number of children, can take up to a year or longer to manifest.
I'm prepared for bad news on Thursday. I figure it's better to prepare for bad news and be relieved by good than hope for good and be devastated by bad.
Still, anyone here ever had a child with a tiny anterior fontanel and things turned out okay?
So far the disappearing fontanel is the only sign of this condition. His head is perfectly round, no sign of "ridges" in his skull or premature sutures. I know from Googling around that the anterior fontanel closes by 3 months for about 1 out of 100 babies (vs. craniosynostosis affecting 1 out of 2000 to 2500 births). I also know that craniosynostosis is usually apparent at birth, but for a very small number of children, can take up to a year or longer to manifest.
I'm prepared for bad news on Thursday. I figure it's better to prepare for bad news and be relieved by good than hope for good and be devastated by bad.
Still, anyone here ever had a child with a tiny anterior fontanel and things turned out okay?