Which of the following is the appropriate area for measuring the head circumference?

The dilemma we face in adoption medicine is that we are not only tasked with determining the health status of a child, but are asked to judge whether a child's brain is healthy. We are requested to assist the family in choosing a child who has a good chance of being a happy and productive member of society, able to participate fully in life's joys and opportunities.

Common Issues

It is impossible to inadvertently inflate the OFC unless a stretchable measuring device is used but easy to obtain a measurement that is artifactually small if one does not move the tape around to seek the largest measurement. This is probably the most common reason why a child has a "small" head circumference.

Remeasuring the head around the biggest possible circumference may place the child within the normal range.

In rare situations, such as premature closure (ossification) of the junctions (sutures) between specific skull bones, brain growth causes the skull to expand upward rather than from front to back. Children with this condition, termed craniosynostosis, may have a small measured OFC but a brain of normal size.

+How Important are Head Measurements in Determining a Child's Health (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});

Head growth has been used by generations of healthcare providers as a marker of brain well-being. Plotting head growth is a ritual in the offices of child healthcare providers worldwide, and children whose heads measure too small or too large for their age are viewed with great concern. However, problems may be encountered with obtaining and interpreting this measurement. These problems are magnified when the child's head is being measured by another individual and interpreted in the absence of complete medical and social information about the mother and child. Nevertheless, head circumference is one of the few pieces of objective information usually included in the referral document.

+Does Head Circumference Really Measure Brain Growth?

In infants between 18 and 43 weeks gestation who died during the first week of life, brain weight correlated directly with head circumference using log10 transformations of the measuremnts. Postnatally, total brain DNA content (number of cells) is linearly directly related to changes in head circumference during the first six months of life, and brain weight and protein content are proportionate to cranial volume calculated from the OFC through the first year of life. For brain growth and head circumference beyond the first year of life, the relative rates of growth are fairly similar. Nearly all brain growth occurs in the first two years and virtually ceases by four years of age. Therefore, head circumference accurately reflects brain size and growth during gestation and the first years of life, the period with the majority of brain growth, except in unusual situations such as hydrocephalus, enlargement of the subdural space, significant scalp edema or a rickets-thickened skull.

+Does Head Size Correlate with Neurologic Outcome?

A correlation between small head circumference (microcephaly) and mental retardation has been recognized since the pioneering work of Kind in 1876 and Tarbell in 1883. This relationship was established primarily through studies that documented a high incidence of microcephaly in groups of mentally retarded or neurologically at-risk individuals. For example, in 1960, measurements were recorded for 2,472 inmates of the California State Institution for the Mentally Deficient. Head circumference means for the total group were below normal for virtually the entire age range. Another study reviewed the clinical records of 247 children from 1 to 15 years of age with small head size, dwarfism, mental retardation, microcephaly or developmental retardation seen between 1956 and 1961 at the Mayo Clinic. The authors concluded that children with a head circumference below minus 2 standard deviations from the mean are, probably with few exceptions, mentally subnormal.

Head circumference is a measurement of a child's head around its largest area. It measures the distance from above the eyebrows and ears and around the back of the head.

Information

During routine checkups, the distance is measured in centimeters or inches and compared with:

  • Past measurements of a child's head circumference.
  • Normal ranges for a child's sex and age (weeks, months), based on values that experts have obtained for normal growth rates of infants' and children's heads.

Measurement of the head circumference is an important part of routine well-baby care. During the well-baby exam, a change from the expected normal head growth may alert the health care provider of a possible problem.

For example, a head that is larger than normal or that is increasing in size faster than normal may be a sign of several problems, including water on the brain (hydrocephalus).

A very small head size (called microcephaly) or very slow growth rate may be a sign that the brain is not developing properly.

Alternative Names

Occipital-frontal circumference

References

Ball JW, Dains JE, Flynn JA, Solomon BS, Stewart RW. Growth and nutrition. In: Ball JW, Dains JE, Flynn JA, Solomon BS, Stewart RW, eds. Siedel's Guide to Physical Examination. 9th ed. St Louis, MO: Elsevier; 2019:chap 8.

Bamba V, Kelly A. Assessment of growth. In: Kliegman RM, St. Geme JW, Blum NJ, Shah SS, Tasker RC, Wilson KM, eds. Nelson Textbook of Pediatrics. 21st ed. Philadelphia, PA: Elsevier; 2020:chap 27.

Riddell A. Children and adolescents. In: Glynn M, Drake WM, eds. Hutchison's Clinical Methods. 24th ed. Philadelphia, PA: Elsevier; 2018:chap 6.

Review Date 2/2/2021

Updated by: Neil K. Kaneshiro, MD, MHA, Clinical Professor of Pediatrics, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, WA. Also reviewed by David Zieve, MD, MHA, Medical Director, Brenda Conaway, Editorial Director, and the A.D.A.M. Editorial team.

Which is an appropriate action when obtaining a pediatric head circumference?

Measure the distance around the back of the child's head with a nonelastic tape measure held above the eyebrows and ears, and plot the measurement on an age- and sex-appropriate growth chart.

When measuring the head circumference of an infant where should the nurse place the tape measure?

To measure the newborn's head circumference, it's best to use a paper tape measure. Place it in a line above the eyebrows, and the pinna of the ears and around to the occipital prominence of the skull, which is the widest part of the back of the baby's skull (Forster & Marron, 2018).

Which of the following is the normal range in inches for newborn head circumference quizlet?

Feedback: Head circumference increases rapidly during the first 6 months. In a 6-month-old it is typically 42 to 44.5 cm (16.5 to 17.5 in); at birth it is usually 33 to 35 cm (13 to 14 in); and at 1 year of age it is usually 45 to 47.5 cm (17.7 to 18.7 in).

Which of the following is the normal range in inches for newborn head circumference?

The average head circumference at birth is about 34 cm (13.5 in.). By the end of the first month, it increases to about 38 cm (15 in.).