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1.
The present study was designed to test the hypothesis that undermining of the soft tissues on the surface of the maxilla at the time of lip repair in unilateral cleft lip, alveolus, and palate results in more severe craniofacial growth aberrations than lip repair alone. Sixty-seven purebred beagles were used in this experiment. The animals were divided into four groups: two control groups (unoperated and unrepaired) and two experimental groups (lip repair without undermining and lip repair with undermining). Lip pressures were monitored in all groups. Significantly higher lip pressures were observed in animals with soft-tissue undermining. Cephalometric measurements were analyzed using univariate and multivariate techniques. The results of this study indicate that lip repair performed with soft-tissue undermining results in more severe craniofacial growth aberrations than lip repair performed alone.  相似文献   

2.
The present study was designed to quantitatively assess lip pressure changes following cleft lip repair in infants with unilateral cleft lip, alveolus, and palate. Lip pressure measurements were taken using an electronic transducer system developed especially for this study. Lip pressure was monitored from 3 months (preoperatively) through 2 years of age in cleft and normal control children. Findings from the present study confirm the hypothesis that lip repair in infants with unilateral cleft lip and palate significantly increases lip pressure and that increased lip pressure remains significantly higher than in normal control children for the 2-year duration of the study. Thus increased lip pressure when the palate is unrepaired has to be considered as a factor modulating subsequent craniofacial growth.  相似文献   

3.
Successful open repair of a cleft lip in utero has the advantage of scarless wound healing in the fetus. Unfortunately, no long-term outcome studies have been performed to evaluate the efficacy of these repairs. Moreover, no study to date has compared the long-term results of an in utero cleft lip repair to a similar, control-matched, newborn cleft repair. This study was performed to evaluate the 9-month outcome of in utero cleft lip surgery compared with an identical cleft lip repair performed on infant lambs. In utero epithelialized cleft lips were created through an open hysterotomy in sixteen 65-day-old fetal lambs (term = 140 days) using methods described by Longaker et al. Eight of 16 animals underwent subsequent in utero repair of these clefts at 90 days gestational age. The repair of the remaining eight animals was delayed until 1 week postpartum. At 9 months, the animals were analyzed for changes in lip contour and for the degree of scarring by hematoxylin and eosin and Masson's trichrome collagen staining. Two animals in each group died from preterm labor. Of the animals that survived to term, all repaired lips had some degree of abnormality postoperatively. One of six lips repaired in utero dehisced before delivery. Three of six neonatal repairs dehisced in the first postoperative month. In the remaining animals with intact lip repairs, the vertical lip height on the repaired side was an average of 9 to 12 mm shorter than the normal lip in both the in utero and neonatally repaired animals. Phenotypically, the postnatally repaired animals had more lip distortion and visible notching. Histologically, the in utero repair was scarless and the neonatal repairs had scar throughout the entire vertical height of the lip with an associated loss of hair in this region. Maxillary growth was also evaluated. There was no inhibition of maxillary growth in the animals that underwent in utero cleft lip repair. However, in the neonatal repair group, significant maxillary retrusion was evident. Compared with the cleft side of the maxilla, horizontal growth was decreased by 11 percent (p = 0.01). Compared with the intrauterine repair group, there was a 17-percent decrease in horizontal maxillary width (p = 0.01). Straight-line in utero repair of a cleft lip produces a better long-term result in terms of maxillary growth than a similar repair performed postnatally in the ovine model. There was no diminution in maxillary growth in the animals treated in utero. Histologically, in utero repair of clefts was indeed scarless. However, both lip repairs produced lips that were significantly shorter than their contralateral noncleft sides. This degree of lip shortening would require a secondary lip revision, thereby defeating the purpose of performing an intrauterine repair. Comparisons now need to be made between in utero and neonatal repairs using a Millard-type rotation advancement technique before intrauterine treatment can be considered to be more beneficial than our current treatment modalities.  相似文献   

4.
This paper reports a longitudinal quantitative cephalometric analysis of the craniofacial growth in subjects with unilateral complete cleft lip and palate (UCCLP), and unilateral incomplete cleft lip (UICL), from 2 to 22 months of age. The purpose of the study was to determine the amount and direction of growth in UCCLP compared to UICL (control group) from 2 months of age (just prior to lip repair) to 22 months of age, 20 months later. The sample comprised of 49 subjects with UCCLP (37 males and 11 females) and 45 with UICL (29 males and 16 females). The cephalometric analysis of the craniofacial morphology included lateral, frontal, and axial projections. The data were presented as mean plots of the craniofacial region including the calvaria, cranial base, orbits, nasal bone, maxilla, mandible, cervical column, pharynx, and soft-tissue profile. A valid common coordinate system (registration according to the n-s line in the lateral projection, latero-orbitale line in the frontal projection, and meatus acusticus externus line in the axial projection for the landmark positions at examination 1 and 2) was ascertained. The growth at a specific anatomical location in a patient was defined as the displacement vector from the coordinate of the corresponding landmark in the X-ray at examination 1 to its coordinate at examination 2, corrected for X-ray magnification. The growth of an anatomical region in a patient was assessed by investigating the growth pattern formed by a collection of individual growth vectors in that region. The amount of growth in the UCCLP and UICL group was very similar. The general craniofacial growth pattern, in terms of the direction of growth, was also fairly similar in the UCCLP group and the control group. However, the maxilla and mandible showed a more vertical growth pattern than that observed in the control group. This study confirms that UCCLP is a localized deviation, and not a craniofacial anomaly, due to the fact that a normal growth potential has been observed in all craniofacial regions, except where the growth had been directly influenced by surgical intervention. Furthermore, the vertical growth pattern of the maxilla and mandible supports the hypothesis of a special facial type in cleft lip and palate individuals, and the facial type as a liability factor increasing the probability of cleft lip and palate.  相似文献   

5.
A model for fetal cleft lip repair in lambs.   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Fetal wounds heal without inflammation and scar formation. This phenomenon may, in the future, be applicable to human cleft lip and palate repair. However, extensive experimental work must first be done to document the benefits of in utero repair. We developed a large animal model for creation and repair of a complete cleft lip and alveolus using fetal lambs. The cleft lip and alveolus deformity was created in eight 75-day-gestation fetuses (term = 145 days) and either repaired in three layers or left unrepaired. There were four sham-operated fetuses, and all animals were alive at harvest. Repaired, unrepaired, and control fetuses were harvested at 7, 14, 21, and 70 days following surgery. The unrepaired fetuses demonstrated a complete cleft lip and alveolus with an oronasal fistula. The maxilla was asymmetrical, with the greater segment deviated toward the cleft and with decreased anterior maxillary width. In contrast, repaired cleft lip and alveolus animals showed no scar, normal thickness of the lip, and a symmetrical maxilla. Histologic analysis of the repaired wounds showed evidence of tissue regeneration without scar formation. The results of this preliminary study indicate that the fetal lamb cleft lip and alveolus model is technically feasible with an excellent survival rate. Healing occurs without scar formation. In the repaired animals, the maxilla was symmetrical. This model will be used to document facial growth following in utero repair of a cleft lip and alveolus.  相似文献   

6.
A retrospective, multivariate statistical analysis of 129 consecutive nonsyndromic patients undergoing cleft palate repair was performed to document the incidence of postoperative fistulas, to determine their cause, and to review methods of surgical management. Nasal-alveolar fistulas and/or anterior palatal fistulas that were intentionally not repaired were excluded from study. Cleft palate fistulas (CPFs) occurred in 30 of 129 patients (23 percent), although nearly a half were 1 to 2 mm in size. Extent of clefting, as estimated by the Veau classification, was significantly more severe in those patients who developed cleft palate fistula. Type of palate closure also influenced the frequency of cleft palate fistula. Forty-three percent of patients undergoing Wardill-type closures developed cleft palate fistula versus 10, 22, and 0 percent for Furlow, von Langenbeck, and Dorrance style closures, respectively. The fistula rate was similar in patients with (30 percent) and without (25 percent) intravelar veloplasty. Age at palate closure did not significantly affect the rate of fistulization; however, the surgeon performing the initial closure did not have an effect. Thirty-seven percent of patients developed recurrent cleft palate fistulas following initial fistula repair. Recurrence of cleft palate fistulas was not influenced by severity of cleft or type of original palate repair. Following end-stage management, a second cleft palate fistula recurrence occurred in 25 percent of patients. Continued open discussion of results of cleft palate repair is recommended.  相似文献   

7.
In a fraction of patients surgically treated for cleft lip/palate, excessive scarring disturbs maxillary growth and dento-alveolar development. Since certain genes are involved in craniofacial morphogenesis as well as tissue repair, a primary defect causing cleft lip/palate could lead to altered wound healing. We performed in vitro wound healing assays with primary lip fibroblasts from 16 cleft lip/palate patients. Nine foreskin fibroblast strains were included for comparison. Cells were grown to confluency and scratch wounds were applied; wound closure was monitored morphometrically over time. Wound closure rate showed highly significant differences between fibroblast strains. Statistically, fibroblast strains from the 25 individuals could be divided into three migratory groups, namely “fast”, “intermediate”, and “slow”. Most cleft lip/palate fibroblasts were distributed between the “fast” (5 strains) and the “intermediate” group (10 strains). These phenotypes were stable over different cell passages from the same individual. Expression of genes involved in cleft lip/palate and wound repair was determined by quantitative PCR. Transforming growth factor-α mRNA was significantly up-regulated in the “fast” group. 5 ng/ml transforming growth factor-α added to the culture medium increased the wound closure rate of cleft lip/palate strains from the “intermediate” migratory group to the level of the “fast”, but had no effect on the latter group. Conversely, antibody to transforming growth factor-α or a specific inhibitor of its receptor most effectively reduced the wound closure rate of “fast” cleft lip/palate strains. Thus, fibroblasts from a distinct subgroup of cleft lip/palate patients exhibit an increased migration rate into wounds in vitro, which is linked to higher transforming growth factor-α expression and attenuated by interfering with its signaling.  相似文献   

8.
J Bardach  K M Kelly 《Plastic and reconstructive surgery》1990,86(6):1093-100; discussion 1101-2
This study was designed to assess the effects of raising mucoperiosteal flaps and exposing palatal bone at the time of palatoplasty. Using 62 beagle puppies as subjects, we tested the hypothesis that raising mucoperiosteal flaps does not interfere with craniofacial growth. We further hypothesized that the size of the area of bone exposed following palatoplasty does affect subsequent craniofacial growth. The animals were divided into four groups: two control groups (unoperated and unrepaired) and two experimental groups. In the first experimental group, two-flap palatoplasty was used to close the surgically induced palatal defect, leaving narrow strips (0 to 2.5 mm) of bone exposed lateral to the flaps. In the second group, one flap was raised to close the defect, leaving a wide area (5 to 6 mm) of palatal bone exposed on one side. Thirty-four direct craniometric measurements were analyzed. Animals that had elevation of both mucoperiosteal flaps with narrow strips of denuded bone on both sides had less severe craniofacial growth aberrations than those in which the defect was left unrepaired or was repaired with one mucoperiosteal flap leaving a wider area of bare bone exposed. These findings suggest that raising mucoperiosteal flaps is less detrimental to craniofacial growth than leaving large areas of exposed palatal bone.  相似文献   

9.
The purpose of this study was to examine parents' perceptions of the health and health-related quality of life in a series of children and adolescents with cleft and other craniofacial anomalies. The subjects for this prospective study were a consecutive series of 54 children and adolescents presenting to an outpatient craniofacial anomalies surgery clinic, ages 5 to 18 years (mean, 8.9 +/- 4.2 years), 50 percent with cleft lip and/or palate, 9 percent synostotic (two coronal, two bicoronal, and one sagittal), 17 percent syndromic (two Apert, one Crouzon, one Noonan, two Goldenhar, two Smith-Lemli-Opitz, and one brachio-oto-renal), and 24 percent with other diagnoses. Subjects were divided into two groups, those with primary cleft lip and/or palate and those with other craniofacial anomalies. Health and health-related quality of life were assessed with the Child Health Questionnaire version PF28, a reliable and valid 28-Likert-item questionnaire completed by parents and yielding physical and psychosocial status scale scores. Physical and psychosocial scale scores largely fell within normal limits for the subset of children with cleft lip and/or palate. There were significant group differences in parents' ratings of global health status, with greater health concerns noted in the non-cleft lip and/or palate group. There were no significant associations between either age or sex and physical or psychosocial health. Physical health, behavior, and psychological status were highly correlated. Using a health status and quality-of-life assessment instrument, findings indicate perceived health differences between groups with and without primary cleft lip and/or palate. In contrast to normative data with the Child Health Questionnaire, findings suggest that there is a significant association between perceived physical health and psychosocial adjustment in the population of children with craniofacial anomalies. The significant perceived health needs of the non-cleft lip and/or palate group and the association between physical health and psychological adjustment highlight the importance of the interdisciplinary nature of craniofacial teams.  相似文献   

10.
Children with clefts, especially those with a cleft palate, have an impaired sucking mechanism and are therefore prone to nutritional problems. This study was undertaken to determine whether children with clefts of the lip and/or palate are underweight for age at the time of primary surgery. Underweight for age was defined as being less than 80 percent of expected weight for age or below the 3rd percentile as plotted on standard percentile charts. The records of all children with clefts seen at the Red Cross Children's Hospital between 1976 and 1996 were reviewed. Of these 740 records, 100 were excluded for inadequate data (47), severe systemic syndrome (27), no operation done (22), or craniofacial cleft (4). The records of 640 children were thus included; 195 (30.5 percent) were underweight for age. By comparison, only 13.7 percent of a similar group of noncleft controls (n = 872) were underweight for age. The difference between these two groups was highly significant (p < 0.01). Factors that influenced weight at the time of primary surgery were type of cleft and age at the time of surgery. Children with cleft palate, whether associated with a cleft lip or not, were found to be more underweight for age than those with an isolated unilateral cleft lip (p = 0.008). Children who had surgery after the age of 1 year were 1.5 times more likely to be underweight for age than children who had surgery under 1 year of age (p < 0.01). Children with isolated cleft palates who were underweight for age had a tendency toward a higher fistula rate (36 percent) than those of normal weight (24 percent) (p = 0.18).  相似文献   

11.
This paper reports a cephalometric analysis of the craniofacial morphology in infants with unoperated unilateral complete cleft lip and palate (UCCLP) and unoperated unilateral incomplete cleft lip (UICL). The purpose of the study was to determine the nature and extent of the craniofacial deviations in UCCLP as compared to the morphology in UICL, which has previously been shown to be close to normal. The samples comprised 82 infants with UCCLP (58 males and 24 females) and 75 with UICL (48 males and 27 females). The mean age was about 2 months in both groups. The cephalometric analysis of craniofacial morphology included the lateral, frontal, and axial projections. The data were presented as mean plots of the craniofacial region including the calvaria, cranial base, orbits, nasal bone, maxilla, mandible, cervical column, pharynx, and soft-tissue profile. The most pronounced deviations in the UCCLP group were observed in the maxillary complex and the mandible. The most striking findings were: markedly increased width of the maxilla, a short mandible, and bimaxillary retrognathia except for the premaxillary area, which was relatively protruding and asymmetric. The study did not support the hypothesis previously suggested in the literature that cleft lip and palate is a craniofacial anomaly as size and shape of the calvaria and cranial base were found to be normal. The etiology of cleft lip and palate is still incompletely understood. Based on the present study, we suggest that facial type may be a liability factor that could represent a developmental threshold increasing the probability of cleft lip and palate.  相似文献   

12.
The purpose of this prospective study was to determine whether unilateral cleft lip repaired by the rotation-advancement flap will grow short on the repaired side. This study involved 56 patients with nonsyndromic unilateral cleft lip (31 with complete and 25 with incomplete cleft lip) who underwent a rotation-advancement flap repair by a single surgeon between 1989 and 1997. Eleven patients were lost to follow-up. Forty-five patients have been followed for a varying period of between 8 and 84 months (mean = 37 months). The upper lip was measured immediately after the lip repair and follow-up using calipers. The growth ratios of vertical, horizontal, and nostril sill dimensions were compared between the cleft side and the noncleft side of the same face. Statistical analysis was performed to compare the growths between the cleft and noncleft sides. There was not a significant difference in the growth ratios of vertical (Wilcoxon signed rank test, p = 0.85) and horizontal dimensions (Student's t test, p = 0.18) between the cleft and noncleft sides. There was, however, a statistically significant difference in the growth ratios of nostril sill width between the cleft and noncleft sides (Student's t test, p = 0.02). Our findings indicated that a repaired unilateral cleft retained the vertical and horizontal dimensions determined at the time of the initial repair.  相似文献   

13.
We report the speech outcome in 90 children with complete unilateral cleft lip and palate who underwent soft palate repair either between 3 and 7 months of age (n = 40) or later than 7 months of age (n = 50). In all patients, palatoplasty was performed by one of two experienced surgeons using a modification of the Furlow technique, and speech evaluations were conducted using the Pittsburgh Weighted Values for Speech Symptoms Associated with Velopharyngeal Incompetence by two speech pathologists with high inter-rater reliability. There were no differences between the groups with respect to resonance, nasal air emission, and articulation. Velopharyngeal function, as measured by the total speech score, was similar between the two groups of patients, as were the rates of secondary pharyngoplasty. These results suggest that very early closure of the soft palate may not offer significant benefit over repair later in infancy with respect to speech outcome.  相似文献   

14.
15.
The purpose of this study was to describe perceptually the speech articulation, voice quality, and velopharyngeal competency of subjects with complete unilateral cleft lip and palate treated by the Zürich approach. The mean age of the 37 subjects was 10.5 years. Although only one subject had had secondary palatal management, no subject was rated as exhibiting a severe articulation or nasality problem. Subjects were rated as exhibiting adequate to marginal velopharyngeal competency 94.5 percent of the time, and the incidence of compensatory articulation errors was low. In comparison with other studies that evaluated the two-stage palatal repair, the Zürich approach appears to give the better results. The type of initial soft palate repair is probably the significant factor which contributes to the better speech of these subjects.  相似文献   

16.
The purpose of this study was to compare the effect of the Latham-Millard presurgical orthopedics, gingivoperiosteoplasty, and lip adhesion protocol with conservative treatment (nonpresurgical orthopedics without gingivoperiosteoplasty) for palatal and dental occlusion in complete bilateral and complete unilateral cleft lip and palate. All patients were from the South Florida Cleft Palate Clinic. A retrospective dental occlusal study was conducted using serial dental casts that had been taken of patients from birth to 12 years of age. All surgical procedures, except for the secondary alveolar bone grafts in the conservative, nonpresurgical orthopedics group, were performed by D. Ralph Millard, Jr. Ralph Latham supervised the presurgical orthopedics cases. Samuel Berkowitz collected and analyzed all the serial records from 1960 to 1996. Among the patients with complete unilateral cleft lip and palate, 30 patients were treated with presurgical orthopedics, gingivoperiosteoplasty, and lip adhesion (the Latham-Millard protocol) and 51 patients were treated conservatively (i.e., nonpresurgical orthopedics without gingivoperiosteoplasty). Among the patients with complete bilateral cleft lip and palate, 21 patients were treated with the Latham-Millard protocol and 49 patients were treated conservatively. Conservative treatment was performed between 1960 and 1980. In patients with bilateral cleft lip and palate, a head bonnet with an elastic strip was used to ventroflex the protruding premaxilla. In all patients (unilateral and bilateral cleft), lip adhesion was performed at 3 months followed by definitive lip surgery at 6 to 8 months and palatal cleft closure between 18 and 24 months of age, in most cases. The Latham-Millard procedure was performed from 1980 to 1996; in bilateral cleft patients, it involved the use of a fixed palatal orthopedic appliance to bodily retract the protruding premaxilla and align it within the alveolar segments soon after birth. In all patients (unilateral and bilateral cleft), palatal alignment was also followed by gingivoperiosteoplasty and lip adhesion. Definitive lip surgery was performed between 6 and 8 months of age, and palatal closure was performed between 8 and 24 months of age using the von Langenbeck procedure with a modified vomer flap. All of the study participants had cleft lips and palates of either the unilateral or bilateral type; the unilateral and bilateral groups were further subdivided based on whether they had received the Latham-Millard protocol or the conservative treatment. It was then determined how many in each of these four basic groups had either anterior or buccal crossbites at four different age levels, when they were approximately 3, 6, 9, and 12 years of age. Although several children entered the study at or just before age 6, every patient in the 9-year-old and 12-year-old sample groups had been in the 6-year-old group and all of the 12-year-olds had been included in the immediate preceding age sample. Two-by-two chi-square tests were carried out within each cleft type (unilateral or bilateral) at each of the four age levels separately, to test whether the treatment groups (protocol versus conservative) differed in the frequency of cases with a given kind of crossbite (rather than not having that kind of crossbite). At every age level, a greater percentage of patients treated with the Latham-Millard protocol developed crossbites than did those treated more conservatively. This difference existed for both the anterior and buccal crossbites and for both unilateral and bilateral clefts. Chi-square tests of the treatment differences in crossbite frequency showed that in three quarters of the Latham-Millard protocol versus conservative treatment comparisons (12 out of 16), a significantly greater frequency of crossbite cases occurred after the Latham-Millard protocol treatment as compared with after the conservative procedure. The chi-square values for the differences in outcome between the two kinds of treatment procedures were greater for the anterior crossbites than for the buccal crossbites, suggesting that the Latham-Millard protocol, relative to the conservative method, was more likely to have an adverse effect on the anterior crossbites than on the buccal crossbites. For those patients born with a bilateral cleft, the differences in crossbite frequency between the protocol and the conservative treatment were statistically significant for patients with an anterior crossbite but not for patients with a buccal crossbite. The analysis shows that in complete bilateral and unilateral cleft lip and palate, the frequency of the anterior crossbite and (except for ages 3 and 12) the buccal crossbite is significantly higher with the Latham-Millard presurgical orthopedics, gingivoperiosteoplasty, and lip adhesion protocol compared with the conservative, nonpresurgical orthopedics without gingivoperiosteoplasty treatment. The exception in the bilateral buccal case may be attributed to the small experimental sample size, which brings down the confidence level.  相似文献   

17.
Growth of the cleft lip following a triangular flap repair   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
This study involves 50 children who had a triangular flap repair for unilateral cleft lip. They have been followed for 5 to 14 years by serial measurements, photographs, and clinical evaluation. During the first 5 years, the lips were designed to allow for future growth. The expected growth did not occur. During the second 5 years, the lip length was designed equal to the normal side with the belief that unequal growth does not occur. In this group, the results supported the premise that deviation from the correct lip length would now be equally divided between too long and too short. None of the entire group has a lip which started too short becoming equal or starting equal to become too long. It is the conclusion of the authors that a repaired unilateral cleft lip retains the configuration and length determined at the time of the initial repair.  相似文献   

18.
There is a common concern that the Veau-Wardill-Kilner type of cleft palate repair causes extensive denudation of the palate, resulting in inhibition of maxillary growth. The evidence for this belief is equivocal in the literature. The authors present some long-term results of this technique from a pure sample of nonsyndromic complete unilateral cleft lip and palate patients operated on by a single intermediate-volume cleft surgeon over a period of 25 years. Twenty-five patients, all born between 1977 and 1989, met the above inclusion criteria. Their age at the time of collection of study models and cephalograms was 9 to 17 years (average, 12 years). Midfacial growth was studied using 12-year dental models and lateral cephalograms taken before definitive orthodontic treatment. These were evaluated using the GOSLON Yardstick and digital cephalometric analysis. The final GOSLON results show that 72 percent of the patients had a good or satisfactory outcome, with a GOSLON score of 1, 2, or 3, and only 28 percent ended with a poor score of 4 or 5. The poor sensitivity of cephalometrics in discerning statistically significant differences was highlighted by the huge overlaps observed in the 95 percent confidence interval graph of mean sella-nasion-subspinale angle (S-N-A) values when comparing the results of the Eurocleft centers with those of the authors' center. The results suggest that satisfactory long-term midfacial growth can be obtained with Veau-Wardill-Kilner cleft palate repair.  相似文献   

19.
Recent experimental work has suggested that increased lip pressure and scar contraction following lip repair with wide soft-tissue undermining may, in part, contribute to midfacial growth inhibition. The present study was designed to test this hypothesis through the application of pharmacologic agents reported to minimize scar contraction. Thirty-six 6-week-old rabbits were divided into six groups: unoperated controls, rabbits with surgically created defects left unrepaired (surgical controls), and four groups of rabbits with surgically created defects with lip repair and wide undermining on the maxillary surface. Animals with lip repair received either no injections or labial subcutaneous injections of distilled water (route-of-injection controls), normal saline, or papaverine hydrochloride for 2 weeks postoperatively. Rabbits with lip repair and saline or papaverine injections showed significantly (p less than 0.05) decreased lip pressure, relatively hypotonic orbicularis oris muscle EMG activity on the cleft lip side, and greater anteroposterior facial growth (assessed radiologically) from 2 to 24 weeks postoperatively compared with rabbits with lip repair and postoperatively compared with rabbits with lip repair and no injections or distilled water injections. Preliminary results suggest that wound contraction following lip repair and soft-tissue undermining may contribute to mid-facial growth inhibition, which may be reduced by pharmacologic manipulations in the rabbit model.  相似文献   

20.
Previously it was thought that primary correction of nasal deformity in cleft lip patients would cause developmental impairment of the nose. It is now widely accepted that simultaneous correction of the cleft lip nasal deformity has no adverse effect on nasal growth. Thus, the authors tried to evaluate the results of primary correction of cleft lip in Asian patients. Of 412 cases of cleft lip, 195 cases were corrected by means of the conventional method from June of 1992 to June of 1997, and 217 cases were corrected by simultaneous rhinoplasty from July of 1997 to October of 2001. The average patient age was 3 months. Photographs and anthropometric evaluation were used to evaluate the results. Nasal tip projection, columellar length, and nasal width were measured in 60 randomized normal children, 30 randomized children treated with the conventional method, and 30 randomized children with primary nasal repair. Data were analyzed using t tests, and the level of significance was 5 percent (p < 0.05). In cases of simultaneous repair, nasal tip projection and columellar length were increased 24.8 percent and 28.8 percent, respectively. Nasal width was increased 12.3 percent in the cases of simultaneous repair and 12.6 percent in the cases without primary rhinoplasty. Simultaneous repair of cleft lip and nasal deformity in Asian patients showed that more symmetry of nostril and nasal dome projection and better correction of buckling and alar flaring were achieved. More balanced growth and development of the alar complex was achieved, and no interference with nasal growth was encountered.  相似文献   

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