Does your LO seem to prefer one hand over the other? It seems like Finley is always batting things with his left and not his right as much. I almost shit when I googled it and read Cerebral Palsy everywhere so I was wondering where your LOs were at?
My LO also seems to prefer his left hand. I think could only be a potential problem when they only use one hand exclusively as in they hardly use the other.
This also doesn't necessarily mean he will grow up to be left handed, I've read that usually isn't determined until 2 or 3 years.
I was trying to get LO to hold on to a rattle the other day and she seemed to have a much easier time grasping it and holding onto it with her right hand vs. her left. DH and I are both righties as well, my Mom was secretly hoping that she was a leftie.
Mine moves both hands but definitely favors his right when trying to grab for something... I figured it was just that he was gonna be a righty! Gah. More things to worry about. I bet parenting was so much less stressful before the invention of Dr. Google.
DD seems to prefer certain hands for certain things. She bats at stuff more with her left, but seems more comfortable grabbing with her right. I wouldn't worry about anything at this stage. They are just figuring out what hands can do. I always try to remember that the Internet is dark and full of terrors.
My LO bats more with his right for sure. He will wave both though. You read what?? That CP is left-dominant?? Hmm....I wouldn't worry so much. If he is moving the other (even if it's not as much) i'm sure hes fine!
Not sure what you are saying? There is a slight increase in commonality of left handedness in children with cerebral palsy but handedness is not an indicator of cerebral palsy. I am left handed and so was my father and one of my brothers. I will be psyched if my son turns out to be a lefty too.
Not sure what you are saying? There is a slight increase in commonality of left handedness in children with cerebral palsy but handedness is not an indicator of cerebral palsy. I am left handed and so was my father and one of my brothers. I will be psyched if my son turns out to be a lefty too.
I'm not saying anything about what hand they will use in the future. That's not a problem. I'm asking if anyone has noticed them using one hand more than the other. As a person stated above, they don't become a leftie or righty until 2 or 3.
LO is left everything. She turns her head more to the left, swats her toys mostly (almost always) with her left hand. I don't know if it has to do with that's how I hold her most often, so that she's always looking left...
I'm not worried. I just figure she won't be the next Derek Zoolander.
Both of my older girls always favored their left hand, but my 4 year old is officially a "rightie" now that she's started writing. I wouldn't put too much thought into it.
DD #1 4 years old (09/22/09)
DD #2 2 years old (08/17/11)
DD #3 born 08/29/13
Not sure what you are saying? There is a slight increase in commonality of left handedness in children with cerebral palsy but handedness is not an indicator of cerebral palsy. I am left handed and so was my father and one of my brothers. I will be psyched if my son turns out to be a lefty too.
I'm not saying anything about what hand they will use in the future. That's not a problem. I'm asking if anyone has noticed them using one hand more than the other. As a person stated above, they don't become a leftie or righty until 2 or 3.
Sure. That's cool I am just not clear what the correlation between hand preference and cerebral palsy is?
I find he uses both hands equally, though my partner insists he prefers the left..not sure if that is his actual observation though or if he's trying to humor me.
So far, DD has done most things for the first time with her right hand, but then seems to prefer to use her left hand instead. She sucked her right thumb first, but now would much rather have her left, etc. She also prefers to hold toys with her left hand. DH is a lefty, so he's really hoping she will be too. Lol.
DS sucks on his left hand but he balls his right hand into a fist and stares at it intently. He prefers to turn his head to the right. DH is a lefty, I'm a righty so it can go either way.
Yes, early hand dominance (doesn't matter which side) is an indicator for cerebral palsy. However, it really has to do with other side. If they show left predominantly is right moving?, is he constantly holding right in a fist?, is he bending and straightening his elbow?, can he bare weight through both elbows in tummy time? Can he bring both hands to midline? I wouldn't worry about it unless there are other signs or delays and just try to involve right hand in play. I've seen hundreds of babies that show beginning signs of hand dominance that are perfectly developing babies.
Edit: sorry for the grammatical errors trying to do too many things at one time
LO is left everything. She turns her head more to the left, swats her toys mostly (almost always) with her left hand. I don't know if it has to do with that's how I hold her most often, so that she's always looking left...
I'm not worried. I just figure she won't be the next Derek Zoolander.
Ha! I used to call my oldest the Zoolander of rolling over. He would only roll from back to belly in one direction. Always.
Yes, early hand dominance (doesn't matter which side) is an indicator for cerebral palsy. However, it really has to do with other side. If they show left predominantly is right moving?, is he constantly holding right in a fist?, is he bending and straightening his elbow?, can he bare weight through both elbows in tummy time? Can he bring both hands to midline? I wouldn't worry about it unless there are other signs or delays and just try to involve right hand in play. I've seen hundreds of babies that show beginning signs of hand dominance that are perfectly developing babies.
Edit: sorry for the grammatical errors trying to do too many things at one time
Thanks for the insight. That was the clarification I was looking for.
Lo is a Right hand man. I mentioned that he favors right over left and our doc tested his startle reflex, said he seems just fine and may just prefer that one. You should try not to worry unless there is a reason to.
Re: Hand preference?
This also doesn't necessarily mean he will grow up to be left handed, I've read that usually isn't determined until 2 or 3 years.
DD2 8.22.13
MMC 1.4.17 at 16w
Expecting #3, EDD 1.29.18
I think you are taking "worried mom" a bit to the extreme........
(The big one is a righty. It started to be evident sometime after he turned two. He does bat lefty, though. And he's pretty good at hitting a ball).
DD #2 2 years old (08/17/11)
DD #3 born 08/29/13
I find he uses both hands equally, though my partner insists he prefers the left..not sure if that is his actual observation though or if he's trying to humor me.
Edit: sorry for the grammatical errors trying to do too many things at one time