I have been thinking about writing this post for a while,
but never really had the chance to sit down and put all of my thoughts into
words. I wanted to write these things out so that we can remember them, but
also because I am hoping it will help another parent when they hear the words:
“Your baby has something called congenital
muscular torticollis.”
Let me back up to the beginning…
Before Jackson was born, he spent a lot of time in the birth
canal during my labor, and had been head down for many weeks before I delivered
him at 39 weeks. Sometime during that period of time when he was head down, or
even another time in utero, his little body got cramped because of the lack of
room and caused his right ear to touch his right shoulder. We aren’t sure how
long he spent in this position, but it was long enough for the neck muscles on
the side in which he was tilting to shorten and tighten up.
After he was born, we could immediately tell that he looked
like he had had a little bit of a rough time coming out. Nothing serious, and I
think it is very typical for babies’ faces to be swollen, especially their
eyelids, after they go through the whole delivery process. My poor little boy
was swollen and puffy, and when he opened his eyes it was barely a squint. After
a few hours, the swelling started to subside, but he remained swollen for at
least a week after birth. Because of all the swelling and just his newborn
squishiness in general, we didn’t notice his head tilted to his right side much
at all.
It wasn’t until the next week when I was home with him that
I noticed he always turned his face to the left. When I was burping him on my
shoulder, he turned his head to the left. When he was lying on his tummy
sleeping on the couch, his head faced toward the left. As a new mom you are
warned of the importance of turning your baby’s head from side to side so that
they don’t develop flat spots on their soft impressionable skulls, so I tried
to physically turn his head to the right a few times. I couldn’t. It felt like
if I kept trying to turn it, I would pull his little muscle, or I would even
break something. There was a resistance when I tried to move his head, and he
started to fuss the more I tried. It really worried me, but I assumed that he
just preferred the left side and that with time he would move to the right as
well.
At his two-week check-up at the pediatrician’s office, his
doctor examined him and chatted with us for a while. She did most of the exam
while Jax lied on Matt’s lap, but when she took him into her arms to look more
closely, she pointed out that she noticed his head tilt. “Does he always tilt
to his right?” she asked. We replied that yes, we felt like he did. She put him
on his belly on the exam table, and he immediately put his head facing the left.
She too tried to lift his head and turn it, but couldn’t get him to move. She
smiled and gently suggested that this can be common and to try for the next few
weeks to put toys on his right side, talk to him from that side, and even lie
him in on the floor where he might try to look at the television on his right.
She said that sometimes repositioning like this is all that babies need to
stretch their neck muscles when they show a preference for one side or the
other. She also told us that it was important that we worked with him because
sometimes if an infant always tilts and faces to one side, it can cause some
facial deformities in the muscles in their cheeks and face. She also advised us that if he didn’t show
improvement at two months, she wanted him to start seeing a physical therapist.
Physical therapy? For my newborn? I couldn’t imagine what
that would be like or look like. I was determined to do all I could to keep
Jackson out of physical therapy.
I began working and repositioning Jackson everyday, but even
after two months of us trying to reposition him, he wasn’t showing signs of
improvement.
I then did what any 21st century mom does: I
googled {don’t you love that that is a verb?!} I started reading about a fairly
common condition called congenital muscular torticollis, and the more I read,
the more I realized that this was what Jackson had. I didn’t need his
pediatrician diagnosing it. I just knew it. He fit all the symptoms and
physical characteristics. Head tilt from birth, face to one side, refusal to
turn to the other side, and a slowly developing flat spot on his skull where
his head always tilted. I had never heard of this condition before, but it apparently
was a common diagnosis and most babies needed physical therapy to correct it.
At Jackson’s two-month check-up, his pediatrician took one
look at him trying to hold his head up and how it continued to tilt to the side
and said that she was going to refer him to a pediatric physical therapist to
correct his torticollis.
I knew it, I
thought.
I immediately asked the pediatrician if she thought this was
something serious or if we should be concerned. She said that no, we shouldn’t
be too concerned, but the best thing was to get into physical therapy early and
to be consistent with the stretches they would show us. She once again reminded
us that there can be some facial deformities if his muscles on one side of his
face were worked more than the other, so that’s why she was pushing us into
therapy so early on. I was thankful for how proactive she was being and called
the physical therapist’s number that she gave us the next day.
*
I'll be back soon with our physical therapy experience!
1 comment:
Praying and sending you hugs. Rest assured the Lords love for little Jax iis great and you can expect great things!
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