by liverbird in london » Mon Mar 23, 2015 9:58 pm
Cosmos99's post could have been written by me. It completely reflects my experience. Our four-month old son had a severely flat head. It was very noticeable and it was also asymmetric, as if someone had sliced off one corner of his head. Like Cosmos99's little one, ours slept very well - ours was one of those babies that slept 10 - 12 hours from three weeks old. We tried "tummy time", a special heart-shaped pillow, but his head remained very flat. His forehead was also slightly bulging out, and it was definitely noticeable because people remarked on his flat head.
We looked on the internet and took our son to LOC in Kingston. He was fitted with a helmet at around 4 months, and 3 months later at seven months old, his head was unrecognisable, it was a "normal" shaped head. The before and after head scans were remarkable. He is now a healthy and bright five and a half year old and you would never know to look at him that his head had been so misshapen. Yes, it is expensive but for us it was worth every penny.
As a footnote, for anyone reading this and thinking, I bet it would have corrected itself over time. The story didn't end there. I then had a daughter (20 months younger than her brother) and yes, she too had a flat head. We thought maybe we were just being hyper-sensitive and were very reluctant to go down the helmet route again. We had her head measured at four months, and it was severe (as opposed to very severe). We then waited three months to see if it would improve by itself, but it seemed to be getting worse. This was confirmed when we had it measured again at seven months - it had indeed become considerably flatter. So, we went down the helmet route again with LOC and she too now has a perfectly normal looking head. Although because she was that much older, the correction time was nine months (unlike my son's three-month treatment). I should add I thought the service LOC provided was brilliant. There's certainly no hard-sell, and they turn parents away if the measurements show the flat head is within a normal range. Happy for anyone to PM me if they have any questions.
Cosmos99's post could have been written by me. It completely reflects my experience. Our four-month old son had a severely flat head. It was very noticeable and it was also asymmetric, as if someone had sliced off one corner of his head. Like Cosmos99's little one, ours slept very well - ours was one of those babies that slept 10 - 12 hours from three weeks old. We tried "tummy time", a special heart-shaped pillow, but his head remained very flat. His forehead was also slightly bulging out, and it was definitely noticeable because people remarked on his flat head.
We looked on the internet and took our son to LOC in Kingston. He was fitted with a helmet at around 4 months, and 3 months later at seven months old, his head was unrecognisable, it was a "normal" shaped head. The before and after head scans were remarkable. He is now a healthy and bright five and a half year old and you would never know to look at him that his head had been so misshapen. Yes, it is expensive but for us it was worth every penny.
As a footnote, for anyone reading this and thinking, I bet it would have corrected itself over time. The story didn't end there. I then had a daughter (20 months younger than her brother) and yes, she too had a flat head. We thought maybe we were just being hyper-sensitive and were very reluctant to go down the helmet route again. We had her head measured at four months, and it was severe (as opposed to very severe). We then waited three months to see if it would improve by itself, but it seemed to be getting worse. This was confirmed when we had it measured again at seven months - it had indeed become considerably flatter. So, we went down the helmet route again with LOC and she too now has a perfectly normal looking head. Although because she was that much older, the correction time was nine months (unlike my son's three-month treatment). I should add I thought the service LOC provided was brilliant. There's certainly no hard-sell, and they turn parents away if the measurements show the flat head is within a normal range. Happy for anyone to PM me if they have any questions.