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Conference moira::parenting_v3

Title:Parenting
Notice:READ 1.27 BEFORE WRITING
Moderator:CSC32::DUBOIS
Created:Wed May 30 1990
Last Modified:Tue May 27 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1364
Total number of notes:23848

712.0. "A lump on the neck, torticolis" by WMOIS::B_REINKE (My gr'baby=*better* than notes!) Sun Feb 17 1991 17:28

    This is something for all of my mothering that I've never
    encountered before.
    
    Last night, i was sitting on the bedroom floor soothing my
    granddaughter, (my son, her father, had brought Canaan up
    for grandma to mother - tho he is himself an excellant involved
    parent, (like his dad) to give her mom, Holly a break so
    she can work on her senior thesis..
    
    any way to get back to the story, after the�� explaination
    
    Canaan has a hard lump on the right side of her neck near
    the collar bone taht I discovered while cuddling her.
    
    Michael said it was definitely new and called Holly up and
    checked with her. Holly could not remember any such sort
    of a lump either (once Michael calmed her down and convicned
    her that their daughter was in no physical danger!)
    
    Michael rubbed the lump most of the night and it was significantly
    smaller this morning.
    
    At church I talked to a good friend and her son had experienced
    enlarged lymph glands that sounded just like what we found
    on Canaan last night.
    
    I'd like some input from other parents. Have your kids had
    lumps like that? It is in the area of the neck that made me
    guess it was a lymph node, but it was so big (the size of
    a large marble) and so hard. But it did diminish over night.
    
    Michael and Holly will take Canaan to the doctor asap this
    week, but as a grandma, I was taken back (after  5 kids)
    to hit up with something that my instincts -watching the
    baby eat and move and smile and etc.- said was no problem,
    but something that I had never encountered.
    
    thanks
    
    Bonnie
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
712.1lymph nodesCSC32::DUBOISThe early bird gets wormsMon Feb 18 1991 15:0010
Bonnie,

Evan has *often* had large lumps on the back or side of his neck.  I have 
always thought of them as lymph nodes and just watched him to see if he needed
additional help (medication) to get well.

It's good to hear it from the doctor, though.  I don't think we ever did 
that (not that we didn't see her for everything *else*!).  :-)

     Carol
712.2CSSE32::RANDALLPray for peaceMon Feb 18 1991 15:505
Often a hard enlarged lymph gland means your body is fighting off a
viral infection.  Every time I get a cold the nodes in my neck under my 
jaw joint swell up so much I sometimes look like a chipmunk...

--bonnie
712.3i remember those!TRACTR::MAZURTue Feb 26 1991 10:369
    My pediatrician pointed two such lumps out to me at my daughter's
    two month check up.  She said that first-time moms are always calling
    up and asking about them.  They are just glands...of course you
    should check with your doctor to make sure, but they sound like
    they are normal.  My pediatrician said that they get bigger and
    smaller depending on whether or not the baby's body is fighting
    off an infection.  (it doesn't mean the baby is sick though)
    
    Sheryl
712.4updateWMOIS::B_REINKEThe fire and the rose are oneThu Feb 28 1991 12:287
    It turns out that the lump was due to a muscle spasm. The spasm
    was caused by a small piece of embryonic tissue that was left
    in the muscle. Holly told me what it was called but I didn't 
    write the name down. They will see a specialist tomorrow and
    Canaan will probably have to have surgery.
    
    Bonnie
712.5WMOIS::B_REINKEbread and rosesSat Mar 09 1991 12:5810
    It turns out that Canaan has a birth defect called a torticalis (sp).
    The specialist said that it can't be operated on, but that they
    have to stretch the muscle or she'll grow up deformed.
    
    Holly and Michael are understandably upset about this and the
    solution they were given. I told them I'd ask here in the file
    if anyone had heard of such a thing and how succesful treatment
    by streching is.
    
    Bonnie
712.6CSC32::DUBOISThe early bird gets wormsMon Mar 11 1991 15:018
<             <<< Note 712.5 by WMOIS::B_REINKE "bread and roses" >>>
<                                -< Torticalis? >-

Bonnie, you should also check the Medical notesfile.

Thanks for the update.  Please continue to keep us informed!

     Carol
712.7WMOIS::B_REINKEbread and rosesMon Mar 11 1991 16:043
    I have Carol, thank you ;-)
    
    Bonnie
712.8updateWMOIS::B_REINKEbread and rosesWed Mar 13 1991 09:1351
    
    This is the information that I got from the Medical file. Canaan's
    condition is definitely an example of the birth related condition,
    and we are hopeful that physical therapy will take care of the problem.
    
    Bonnie
    
    
              <<< VMSZOO::FOLKD$:[NOTES$LIBRARY]MEDICAL.NOTE;1 >>>
                       -< MEDICAL questions and answers >-
================================================================================
Note 915.3             Torticalis (sp) Muscle abnormality                 3 of 4
VMSZOO::ECKERT "Flunking afterlife"                  37 lines  11-MAR-1991 23:19
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Bonnie, here's what I could find in the Merck Manual:

    Etiology varies and often cannot be defined.  The congenital variety
    is often associated with with injury to the sternocleidomastoid muscle
    on one side at the time of birth during a difficult delivery, and the
    muscle's transformation into a fibrous cord that cannot lengthen with
    the growing neck.  Minimal deformity may be seen at birth but, within a
    few weeks, a firm swelling occurs in one sternocleidomastoid muscle,
    which then contracts.  Neck muscle contraction in children may also be
    secondary to ocular muscle imbalance or defects of the cervical spine
    or musculature.

    In infants, the neck should be inspected for asymmetry, abnormal
    structures, or masses.  A hematoma of the sternomastoid muscle
    [sic - sternocleidomastoid?  JAE] may be seen within several days
    of delivery (usually breech) and may become fibromatous in subsequent
    months.  Similarly, other pathologic processes in the neck must be
    ruled out by history of trauma, dysfunction, and by radiologic studies
    of the cervical spine, including x-rays, CT scan, or MRI.  A history
    of encephalitis or evidence of extrapyramidal disease may be present.
    Electromyographic, neurologic, and physiologic studies usually are
    negative.

    Prognosis is good for correctable pathologic processes in the neck or
    head; neurologic and psychiatric processes [usually associated with adult
    onset  JAE] are more difficult to treat.  The spasm can sometimes be
    temporarily inhibited by physical therapy and massage modalities; eg,
    applying slight tactile pressure to the same side of the jaw as the
    head rotation (sensory biofeedback technics).  In general, however,
    medical remedies are useless. 
    [...]
    Congenital torticollis should be treated within the first few months
    of life, initially with intensive physical therapy measures,
    including daily passive stretching of the shortened muscle for at
    least one year.  If physical therapy is started later in infancy
    or is not successful, operative division of the contracted
    sternocleidomastoid muscle and soft tissues may be indicated.