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June 2026 Pediatric Lecture Series: Interesting Pe ...
Session Recording
Session Recording
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Video Summary
The lecture presented four pediatric rehab cases centered on the difficult question of whether to diagnose cerebral palsy (CP) when children have motor delays, tone differences, prematurity, brain injury, or possible genetic causes. The speakers described Gillette Children’s motor delay clinic, where PM&R, neurology, and PT assess infants early using tools like the HINE.<br /><br />Case 1 involved an infant with microcephaly, hypotonia, abnormal MRI findings suggestive of mild holoprosencephaly, and a PRKD1 gene deletion. The group debated CP versus a genetic disorder with possible progressive neurologic disease.<br /><br />Case 2 was an extremely premature infant with IVH and early contractures. Despite early concern for CP, later improvement, a higher Hammersmith score, and negative genome testing made CP less certain.<br /><br />Case 3 featured a child with cerebellar hemorrhage, toe walking, balance issues, and later developmental and behavioral concerns. A gait lab questioned CP, but the presenters still felt the overall picture fit CP.<br /><br />Case 4 described a child with prematurity, toe walking, mild spasticity, and subtle white matter MRI changes. CP was again debated, with consideration of alternative diagnoses such as autism-related toe walking or developmental delay.<br /><br />Overall, the talk emphasized that CP diagnosis can be complex, may evolve over time, and sometimes requires balancing neurologic findings, genetics, function, and access to services.
Keywords
cerebral palsy
pediatric rehabilitation
motor delay
prematurity
genetic disorder
HINE assessment
brain injury
toe walking
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