We evaluated 27 children who had been operated on 5-10 years previousl
y for sagittal synostosis. The mean age at operation was 0.55 years. T
wenty-two children were treated by the senior author's technique, 4 by
the Pi craniectomy technique and 1 by parasagittal sagittal strip cra
niectomies. The mean age at follow-up was 9.6 years. The cosmetic appe
arance of the head was graded independently by 3 examiners. Skull radi
ographs were graded by 2 examiners according to the appearance and pre
sence of beaten copper markings. The cephalic index was measured. Freq
uent headaches were reported in 7 of 27 children and were migrainous i
n 3 of the 7. No child had papilledema. The children's appearance was
considered to be normal or mildly abnormaly by the parents in every ca
se and by the medical observers in 25 of 27 (93%). The only 2 children
with an unacceptable appearance were either operated late (3.3 years)
or had a craniofacial syndrome. Skull radiographs revealed a normal o
r mildly abnormal appearance in 18-19 children, depending on the obser
ver. Beaten copper markings were observed to some extent in 14 of 27 c
ases and did not correlate with the presence of headaches. The cranial
index ranged from 62 to 78 with a mean of 70 (normal 81). Sagittal re
constructions resulted in an acceptable appearance 5-10 years postoper
atively in all cases operated on at less than I year of age who had no
syndrome. The need for long-term follow-up of children after sagittal
synostosis operations cannot be determined from this sample size.