• ABSTRACT
    • 10-40% of children with Down's syndrome have atlantoaxial instability. These children might run the risk of spinal cord compression if they play sport. The aim of our study was to assess this presumed risk. We obtained 282 radiographs of the cervical spine from a cohort of 400 children and young adults with Down's syndrome who attended special schools and who were between 4 and 20 years old (about 25% of all such children in the Netherlands). The atlantoaxial distance was more than 4 mm in 91 children. These children were randomly assigned to two groups, with the provision that all children at any particular school were assigned to the same group. Children of one group were allowed to continue their habitual sports and exercise activities, whereas those in the other group were advised not to play "risky" sports (as defined by a panel of four experts) and not to make "risky" movements during physical education lessons. The compliance of the experimental group was good. After a year, there were no differences between the groups in scores on a functional motor scale, the frequency of neurological signs, or changes in the atlantoaxial distance. The motor function of a third group of 44 children with Down's syndrome but normal atlantoaxial distances was similar to that of children in the other two groups, as was the frequency of neurological signs. These findings suggest there is no reason to stop children with Down's syndrome from playing certain sports and no need to screen them by radiography before they take up such sports activities.