首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 32 毫秒
1.
Submucous cleft palate is a congenital malformation with specific clinical and anatomical features. It can be present with or without velopharyngeal insufficiency. Surgical treatment of this malformation is indicated only when velopharyngeal insufficiency has been demonstrated. This article compares two modalities of surgical treatment for submucous cleft palate. The first includes a minimal incision palatopharyngoplasty, as described in a previous report. The second combines the first technique with additional individualized velopharyngeal surgery (individualized pharyngeal flap or sphincter pharyngoplasty) performed simultaneously. The individualized part of the procedure was selected and performed according to the findings of videonasopharyngoscopy and multiview videofluoroscopy, as reported previously. Two hundred and three patients with submucous cleft palate were studied from 1990 to 1999. Videonasopharyngoscopy and multiview videofluoroscopy demonstrated velopharyngeal insufficiency in 72 patients, who were randomly divided into two groups. Those in group 1 (n = 37) underwent a minimal incision palatopharyngoplasty. Patients in group 2 (n = 35) also underwent that procedure but simultaneously received individualized pharyngeal flap or sphincter pharyngoplasty, according to the findings of videonasopharyngoscopy and multiview videofluoroscopy. The median age of the patients from both groups was not significantly different (p > 0.5). The frequency of residual velopharyngeal insufficiency after palatal closure was not significantly different in both groups of patients (14 percent versus 11 percent; p > 0.5). The mean size of the gap at the velopharyngeal sphincter during speech was not significantly different in both groups of patients before surgery (23 percent versus 22 percent; p > 0.5). After the surgical procedures, there was a nonsignificant difference between both groups of patients in mean residual size of the gap in cases of velopharyngeal insufficiency (7 percent versus 8 percent; p > 0.5). It seems that minimal incision palatopharyngoplasty is a safe and reliable procedure for palatal closure in patients with submucous cleft palate. The use of additional individualized velopharyngeal surgery performed simultaneously did not seem to decrease the frequency of residual velopharyngeal insufficiency. Moreover, the residual size of the gap at the velopharyngeal sphincter was not significantly reduced when an additional surgical procedure was performed simultaneously with palatal closure.  相似文献   

2.
Historically at The Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto, pharyngeal flap pharyngoplasty has been the treatment of choice for treatment of velopharyngeal insufficiency, regardless of velopharyngeal closure pattern. The authors hypothesize that pharyngeal flap pharyngoplasty is more effective in treating velopharyngeal insufficiency in patients with circular or sagittal velopharyngeal closure and less effective in treating the coronal closure pattern. Ninety-three patients who underwent superiorly based pharyngeal flap surgery for velopharyngeal insufficiency were evaluated in a retrospective chart review. Closure pattern was determined preoperatively by nasopharyngoscopy or multiview videofluoroscopy. Nasalance was assessed preoperatively and at 6 weeks and 1 year postoperatively. Nasalance during nonnasal speech was decreased on average, for all closure patterns, postoperatively. However, a significantly higher percentage of patients were corrected to normal nasalance scores in thenoncoronal group than in the coronal group (57 percent versus 35 percent, respectively) at 1 year postoperatively (p < 0.05). Surgical overcorrection, as determined by postoperative hyponasality, occurred at a rate of 13 percent in the coronal group versus 7 percent in the noncoronal group (not statistically significant). The results demonstrate that hypernasality in patients with a coronal velopharyngeal closure pattern can be improved by pharyngeal flap pharyngoplasty. This procedure, however, is more frequently effective in correcting noncoronal closure pattern velopharyngeal insufficiency than coronal pattern velopharyngeal insufficiency. The authors are now more selective in their approach to the management of velopharyngeal insufficiency and are more inclined to treat coronal pattern velopharyngeal insufficiency with sphincter pharyngoplasty.  相似文献   

3.
Sphincter pharyngoplasty is a surgical procedure for managing velopharyngeal insufficiency after palatal closure. This procedure is intended to create an active diaphragm for velopharyngeal closure. The purpose of this study was to evaluate velopharyngeal motion after sphincter pharyngoplasty, by using selective electromyography and simultaneous videonasopharyngoscopy. Twenty-five patients who were subjected to sphincter pharyngoplasty from 1985 to 1996 were reviewed. All conditions were evaluated by using electromyography with simultaneous videonasopharyngoscopy. The following velopharyngeal muscles were examined: superior constrictor pharyngeus, palatopharyngeus, and levator veli palatini. The palatopharyngeus was included in the superiorly based surgical flaps inserted at the posterior pharyngeal wall. Twenty-three patients (92 percent) showed complete velopharyngeal closure. The two patients with residual velopharyngeal insufficiency showed a defect size of 20 and 25 percent. None of the patients showed electromyographic activity at the superiorly based flaps, indicating absence of activity of the palatopharyngeus muscles. However, all patients showed normal electromyographic activity at the superior constrictor pharyngeus and the levator veli palatini. Videonasopharyngoscopy demonstrated that lateral pharyngeal wall movements, which ranged from 25 to 40 percent, were related to strong electromyographic activity at the superior constrictor pharyngeus. It is concluded that the superiorly based pharyngeal flaps of the sphincter pharyngoplasty do not seem to create an active diaphragm for velopharyngeal closure. Moreover, the observed sphinctering seems to be passive, caused by the contraction of the superior constrictor pharyngeus.  相似文献   

4.
Sphincter pharyngoplasty is frequently used for the management of children with velopharyngeal insufficiency. The purpose of this study was to evaluate outcome and revision rates of sphincter pharyngoplasty at the authors' institution. Two hundred fifty patients underwent sphincter pharyngoplasty for velopharyngeal insufficiency between January of 1987 and March of 2001. There were 117 female patients and 133 male patients, with a mean age at primary sphincter pharyngoplasty of 7.6 years (range, 1 to 45 years). Diagnoses included velopharyngeal insufficiency alone (n = 63), velopharyngeal insufficiency associated with cleft palate (n = 127), velocardiofacial syndrome (n = 32), submucous cleft (n = 15), and other (n = 13). Pharyngoplasty revision was defined as any secondary surgical revision of the sphincter as determined by clinical evaluation and objective speech assessment. The pharyngoplasty revision rate was found to be 12.8 percent (n = 32). A favorable outcome was demonstrated in 30 of these patients (93.8 percent) after pharyngoplasty revision. Two patients, one with a diagnosis of a submucous cleft and velocardiofacial syndrome and the other with a cleft palate, required a second revision because of persistent velopharyngeal insufficiency. The revision rate was highest in those patients with velocardiofacial syndrome (21.8 percent) and lowest in patients with velopharyngeal insufficiency alone (6.3 percent). Patients who required revision had significantly higher preoperative oral sentence nasometry (55.2 percent versus 46.1 percent; p < 0.01) and larger velopharyngeal areas (23.7 mm2 versus 18.9 mm2). There was no significant difference in age or sex for those patients who required a revision compared with those who did not require revision. Mean follow-up was 2.4 years (range, 4 months to 13.6 years). Sphincter pharyngoplasty is an effective procedure for the treatment of velopharyngeal insufficiency using revision rate as the standard of success. It had an 87 percent primary success rate that increased to 99 percent after a single revision. Patients with velocardiofacial syndrome, more severe preoperative hypernasal resonance, and larger velopharyngeal areas were more likely to require pharyngoplasty revision.  相似文献   

5.
Recent studies have shown that the Furlow double-opposing Z-plasty has several advantages that make it an attractive procedure for cleft palate repair and treatment of velopharyngeal insufficiency in selected cases. The anatomic changes associated with this procedure have never been documented prospectively. The purpose of this study was to describe radiographic dimensions of the velopharynx and aerodynamic measures of velopharyngeal function in a group of patients before and after Furlow Z-plasty for the treatment of velopharyngeal insufficiency. Twelve consecutive patients with cleft palate and velopharyngeal insufficiency, ranging in age from 3 to 19 years, were selected as candidates for Furlow Z-plasty based on perceptual, endoscopic, and radiographic findings. Eight patients had repaired cleft palate with a residual muscle diastasis and four patients had unrepaired submucous cleft palate. Subjects received aerodynamic and cephalometric assessments before and after Z-plasty. Cephalometric x-rays were measured for velar length, thickness, and pharyngeal depth. Mean nasal airflow during pressure consonants (Vn) was calculated from pressure/flow studies, and patients were categorized as having complete closure (<10 cc/sec Vn) or incomplete closure (>10 cc/ sec Vn). After Z-plasty, there was a significant increase in velar length (p = 0.002) and velar thickness (p = 0.001). After surgery, patients with complete velopharyngeal closure had significantly greater velar length than the incomplete closure group (p = 0.05) with nearly twice the increase in length. Similarly, following surgery, the complete closure group had significantly greater thickness than the incomplete closure group (p = 0.01), with a greater postoperative increase in velar thickness (p = 0.005). Finally, there was a significant negative correlation between percent increase in length and percent increase in thickness for patients in the complete closure group (r = -0.91, p = 0.03). Findings demonstrate that following Furlow Z-plasty, patients with cleft palate and velopharyngeal insufficiency obtained significant increases in velar length and thickness. Greater velar length and greater velar thickness both were associated with complete velopharyngeal closure. Patients in the complete closure group tended to demonstrate large percent gains in either length or thickness or moderate gains in both. Patients in the incomplete closure group tended to demonstrate relatively small percent gains in both dimensions. Results suggest there may be important anatomic features (such as pharyngeal depth/velar length ratio) that can be evaluated before surgery to predict which patients may be most likely to benefit from Furlow Z-plasty as a form of treatment for velopharyngeal insufficiency.  相似文献   

6.
Myomucosal flaps employing the palatoglossi were used to correct posttonsillectomy velopharyngeal insufficiency because the palatopharyngeus were resected with the posterior tonsillar pillar. This new sphincter pharyngoplasty may have a role as a secondary option for treatment of velopharyngeal insufficiency. It should be remembered that this operation has only been performed in a single patient without cleft palate, and, therefore, its application in the cleft population and its potential complication rate are unknown.  相似文献   

7.
This prospective study was done to determine whether a new cleft palate repair utilizing uvular transposition improved speech outcome as measured objectively by a speech pathologist. In the uvular transposition procedure, the palate was lengthened with tissue from the uvula by a double-opposing Z-plasty; an intravelar veloplasty was performed, and two-thirds of the mass of the uvula was transposed to the nasal surface of the soft palate. This procedure facilitates velopharyngeal closure by significantly lengthening the palate, anatomically reconstructing the muscles of the palate, and decreasing the palatal excursion necessary to achieve closure. Sixty-two children with a cleft palate were treated with this procedure performed by the senior surgeon between the years of 1988 and 1995. These children were then enrolled in cleft lip and palate clinic at age 2 to 3 years and blindly evaluated yearly by a single speech pathologist who specialized in pediatric speech pathology. Postoperative clinical follow-up ranged from 36 to 112 months (mean, 56.8 months). Perceptual nasal emission was found to be normal in 59 of the 62 patients (95 percent). Nasometry was performed in all 62 of these patients, and the mean score was 15.7 percent, well within the accepted normal range of 25 or less at our institution. Only two of these children (3 percent) required a pharyngeal flap for velopharyngeal insufficiency. These findings suggest that the uvula transposition cleft palate repair may result in good normalization of speech with negligible rates of velopharyngeal insufficiency.  相似文献   

8.
The purpose of this review was to evaluate the clinical outcomes regarding velopharyngeal insufficiency and fistulization in patients with cleft palate who underwent primary repair with the one-stage Delaire palatoplasty. All patients who had a primary Delaire-type palatoplasty performed by the senior surgeon over a 10-year period (1988 to 1998) were studied. During this period, each consecutive patient with an open palatal cleft underwent the same type of repair by the same surgeon. Speech quality and velopharyngeal competence as determined by a single speech pathologist were recorded. A total of 95 patients were included in this series. The average length of follow-up was 31 months (range, 1 to 118 months). Average age at time of surgery was 13.3 months (range, 6 to 180 months). Thirty-one patients (32.6 percent) had significant associated anomalies. The average length of hospital stay was 1.9 days (range, 1 to 8 days) with a trend in recent years toward discharge on postoperative day 1. There were no intraoperative complications, either surgical or anesthetic. Three patients (3.2 percent) developed palatal fistula; none of them required repair. Six patients (6.3 percent) had velopharyngeal incompetence. In patients with more than 1 year of follow-up, the incidence of velopharyngeal incompetence was 9.2 percent (6 of 65). The incidence of fistula after the Delaire palatoplasty was lower than usually reported. The incidence of velopharyngeal incompetence requiring pharyngoplasty was equal to or lower than that seen after other types of palatoplasty, suggesting superior soft-palate muscle function attributable to approximation of the musculus uvulae. The Delaire palatoplasty results in a functional palate with low risk for fistula formation and velopharyngeal incompetence.  相似文献   

9.
A retrospective study was undertaken to assess speech outcomes in patients undergoing Furlow palatoplasty. Since 1994, the authors have used the position of the levator veli palatini musculature to determine type of surgical intervention recommended for the management of velopharyngeal insufficiency. Furlow palatoplasty has been used in patients with clinical evidence of sagittally oriented levator veli palatini musculature. Forty-eight patients who underwent a Furlow palatoplasty between June of 1994 and August of 1998 were included. All patients underwent preoperative and postoperative perceptual speech analyses to describe velopharyngeal insufficiency severity, nasal air emissions, and resonance, and preoperative nasendoscopy to assess velopharyngeal gap size and palatal and lateral pharyngeal wall movement. Other patient characteristics considered included gender, age at time of surgery, previously repaired cleft palate, submucous cleft palate, and syndrome diagnosis. Speech outcomes were determined on the basis of postoperative perceptual speech analyses and were categorized in one of three ways: (1) complete resolution of velopharyngeal insufficiency, (2) substantial improvement of velopharyngeal insufficiency, and (3) audible residual velopharyngeal insufficiency. Complete resolution of velopharyngeal insufficiency was defined as normal resonance and an absence of nasal air emissions. Substantial improvement of velopharyngeal insufficiency was defined as an improvement of at least two categories in velopharyngeal insufficiency severity in those patients without complete resolution. Audible residual velopharyngeal insufficiency refers to patients with postoperative velopharyngeal insufficiency severity ratings of mild, moderate, or severe. The male:female ratio in the study was 27:21. Twelve patients were syndromic; three had velocardiofacial syndrome. The median age at surgery was 6.5 years (range, 2 to 22 years). The average duration of follow-up was 14.7 months (range, 1.3 to 58.6 months). Postoperatively, the severity of velopharyngeal insufficiency was rated as none in 19 of the 48 patients (39.6 percent), minimal in eight (16.7 percent), mild in six (12.5 percent), moderate in nine (18.75 percent), and severe in six (12.5 percent). Substantial improvement was seen in seven of the 29 patients without complete resolution. There was a significant association between male gender and complete resolution of velopharyngeal insufficiency (p < 0.05). Presence of syndrome and female gender was associated with audible residual velopharyngeal insufficiency (p < 0.05). The main complication was palatal fistula (two cases). In conclusion, most patients who underwent a Furlow palatoplasty had a complete resolution or substantial improvement of velopharyngeal insufficiency postoperatively, and there were few surgical complications.  相似文献   

10.
The pharyngeal flap is the most often used surgical approach to treat the problem of velopharyngeal insufficiency, a common challenge encountered in cleft palate and craniofacial clinics. The authors retrospectively reviewed short-term and long-term measures of children treated with the pharyngeal flap at the University of Iowa Cleft and Craniofacial Center. All patients who underwent pharyngeal flap surgery between January of 1970 and December of 2000, with at least one postoperative speech assessment between 2 and 5 years after the operation, were identified. Both hypernasality and hyponasality were evaluated on a scale from 1 to 6, with 1 indicating no involvement and 6 indicating severe effect on resonance. Velopharyngeal competence was also rated on a scale of 1 to 3, with 1 indicating competence and 3 indicating incompetence. These short-term data were then compared. The results showed that overall resonance performance continues to be adequate and may even improve as the patient continues to grow and mature. These findings support the use of the pharyngeal flap in the treatment of children with velopharyngeal insufficiency.  相似文献   

11.
The restoration of velopharyngeal function after extensive soft palate resection to treat malignant oropharyngeal tumors is a major challenge to reconstructive surgeons. The authors had previously reconstructed soft palatal defects routinely with the folded forearm flap. A patient who had more than half of the soft palate excised experienced postoperative velopharyngeal dysfunction. To restore efficient velopharyngeal function, pharyngoplasty was additively applied where the folded ridge of the forearm flap was sutured to the posterior pharyngeal wall in an inverse manner of the pharyngeal flap technique. The essence of the procedure was positive narrowing of the nasopharyngeal space. Five patients who underwent this pharyngoplasty and another five who did not were evaluated for postoperative functions of speech intelligibility and of nasal regurgitation during oral feeding. The velopharyngeal movements of all patients were examined under a nasopharyngeal endoscope. The evaluations demonstrated that this surgical procedure afforded satisfactory results. This positive narrowing pharyngoplasty technique is simple, easy, and minimally invasive to the remaining healthy tissue, and it is the method of choice for the reconstruction of the soft palate after malignant tumor resection.  相似文献   

12.
Cleft palate repair by double opposing Z-plasty   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
In an attempt to improve speech results following palate repair while allowing adequate maxillary growth, a palatoplasty using two opposing Z-plasties of the soft palate, one of the oral and one of the nasal layers, has been used in 22 infants. Eight patients had unilateral cleft lip and palate, eight had bilateral cleft lip and palate, and six had cleft palate. The Z-plasties facilitate effective dissection and redirection of the palatal muscles to produce an overlapping muscle sling and lengthen the velum without using tissue from the hard palate, which permits hard palate closure without pushback or lateral relaxing incisions. Of the 20 children old enough for speech evaluation, 18 have no velopharyngeal insufficiency. Two have very mild velopharyngeal insufficiency. None has required a pharyngeal flap.  相似文献   

13.
The purpose of this study was to appraise the value of preoperative speech assessments, nasopharyngoscopy, and surgical models as predictors of velopharyngeal deterioration after a Le Fort I maxillary advancement in cleft patients. This retrospective study involved a series of 26 cleft patients (16 unilateral complete and nine bilateral complete cleft lips and palates, and one isolated complete cleft palate) who had Le Fort I maxillary advancements between March 1, 1993, and February 7, 1996. The 13 male patients and 13 female patients ranged in age from 15.3 to 46 years (mean age, 19.5 years). Four of these patients had previously undergone pharyngeal flap surgery. Eleven patients had palatal fistulas and one had a bifid uvula that was repaired at the time of orthognathic surgery. Patients with perceived hypernasal speech preoperatively all had hypernasality after advancement (nine of nine). Velopharyngeal insufficiency was observed in two of the 16 whose resonance preoperatively was within normal limits. Speech assessment, therefore, predicted accurately the postoperative status in 23 of 26 patients. Twelve patients had preoperative nasopharyngoscopy that indicated a high risk for velopharyngeal insufficiency (borderline or inadequate closure). Nine of these patients had postoperative velopharyngeal insufficiency. Two of the 14 patients not judged at risk by nasopharyngoscopy developed velopharyngeal insufficiency. Therefore, 21 of the 26 patients were accurately predicted by nasopharyngoscopy. Scoping detected borderline velopharyngeal insufficiency in one patient who was not detected by speech alone. The combined predictive value of speech and scope identified all but one patient who would develop postoperative velopharyngeal insufficiency. The degree of anteroposterior movement determined from surgical models was not predictive of the outcome. Patients with hypernasal speech preoperatively continue to have hypernasal speech after Le Fort I advancement. Preoperative perceptual speech assessment by specially trained speech-language pathologists is an excellent test for predicting postoperative velopharyngeal insufficiency status. Nasopharyngoscopy is an invasive and resource-dependent test that should be assessed with respect to cost effectiveness. In this series, only one patient's risk was more accurately predicted using nasopharyngoscopy than by speech assessment alone.  相似文献   

14.
The speech outcome was studied retrospectively in 140 cleft-palate patients who underwent push-back palatoplasty. Velopharyngeal function and articulation disorders were evaluated serially at 4, 7, 10, and more than 10 years of age. On comparison of velopharyngeal function between 4 years of age and the most recent review (>10 years), it was unchanged in 90 patients (64.3 percent), whereas it showed deterioration in 14 patients and showed improvement in 8 patients. The other 28 patients underwent pharyngeal flap surgery; this group also included patients with functional deterioration. Changes of velopharyngeal function often occurred between 4 and 7 years of age but sometimes occurred after 10 years of age. Articulation disorders were observed in 49 subjects (35.0 percent) at 4 years of age. Many of the patients with glottal stop showed improvement from 4 to 7 years of age. Palatalized articulation showed less improvement than glottal stop (p < 0.01). The number of patients with articulation disorders decreased significantly between 4 years of age and the most recent review (p < 0.001). These findings suggest that speech does not become stable before 10 years of age and that patients with cleft palate should be carefully followed until they are beyond this age.  相似文献   

15.

Background

Patients with the 22q11.2 deletion syndrome (22qDS) and velopharyngeal dysfunction (VPD) tend to have residual VPD following surgery. This systematic review seeks to determine whether a particular surgical procedure results in superior speech outcome or less morbidity.

Methodology/ Principal Findings

A combined computerized and hand-search yielded 70 studies, of which 27 were deemed relevant for this review, reporting on a total of 525 patients with 22qDS and VPD undergoing surgery for VPD. All studies were levels 2c or 4 evidence. The methodological quality of these studies was assessed using criteria based on the Cochrane Collaboration''s tool for assessing risk of bias. Heterogeneous groups of patients were reported on in the studies. The surgical procedure was often tailored to findings on preoperative imaging. Overall, 50% of patients attained normal resonance, 48% attained normal nasal emissions scores, and 83% had understandable speech postoperatively. However, 5% became hyponasal, 1% had obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), and 17% required further surgery. There were no significant differences in speech outcome between patients who underwent a fat injection, Furlow or intravelar veloplasty, pharyngeal flap pharyngoplasty, Honig pharyngoplasty, or sphincter pharyngoplasty or Hynes procedures. There was a trend that a lower percentage of patients attained normal resonance after a fat injection or palatoplasty than after the more obstructive pharyngoplasties (11–18% versus 44–62%, p = 0.08). Only patients who underwent pharyngeal flaps or sphincter pharyngoplasties incurred OSA, yet this was not statistically significantly more often than after other procedures (p = 0.25). More patients who underwent a palatoplasty needed further surgery than those who underwent a pharyngoplasty (50% versus 7–13%, p = 0.03).

Conclusions/ Significance

In the heterogeneous group of patients with 22qDS and VPD, a grade C recommendation can be made to minimize the morbidity of further surgery by choosing to perform a pharyngoplasty directly instead of only a palatoplasty.  相似文献   

16.
Seventy-four patients were referred to the senior author because of presumed velopharyngeal incompetence without cleft palate. As a result of an extensive preoperative evaluation that included assessment of articulation patterns, nasal emission, oronasal resonance, and general speech intelligibility, 57 of the 74 patients were selected for a pharyngeal flap procedure. In 54 of the 57 patients (95 percent), the operation corrected inappropriate nasal emission and hypernasality and improved intraoral air pressure to allow normal speech production.  相似文献   

17.
The treatment of velopharyngeal incompetence remains unsatisfactory because the causes are many, as are the variations in anatomic and physiologic defects. Therefore, full assessment and investigation are essential in tailoring the surgery to the defect. A modified Hynes pharyngoplasty has been used in 40 patients, aged 4 to 52, over a 4-year period for velopharyngeal incompetence of varying etiologic causes. Speech was assessed before and at least 6 months after pharyngoplasty. At the same time, radiologic and, when possible, nasendoscopic investigations were undertaken. Thirty-eight patients had no or variable nasal escape (variable defined as achieving intermittent closure), whereas 33 had normal or slight hyponasal resonance. There was only one complication, an asymptomatic dehiscence of the "bucket handle" flap from the posterior wall. Thirteen patients had an assortment of side effects, none requiring surgical treatment. We believe that patients who are suitable for the described sphincter pharyngoplasty are those with slight or moderate nasal escape having a mobile palate with an anteroposterior gap of 5 mm or less.  相似文献   

18.
Internal carotid arteries of unusual size and tortuosity were found before or at the time of pharyngeal flap surgery in three children who had the velocardiofacial syndrome with velopharyngeal insufficiency. In two cases, medial displacement of the arteries prevented surgery, and in the other, hypernasality persisted because only a narrow, asymmetrical flap could be raised. Medial displacement of the internal carotid arteries inhibits surgical treatment of velopharyngeal insufficiency, necessitating treatment with a prosthetic speech device in such children. Since displacement and tortuosity may be associated findings in the velocardiofacial syndrome, the exact location of the internal carotids should be ascertained when pharyngeal flap surgery is planned.  相似文献   

19.
Submucous clefts of the palate may present with velopharyngeal incompetence (VPI) or a history of recurrent otitis media. Many surgeons have favored a pharyngeal flap as primary treatment of the velopharyngeal incompetence associated with this disorder. The increasing number of case reports of sleep apnea and airway compromise associated with pharyngeal flaps prompted the use of levator muscle repositioning with palatal lengthening as initial therapy in 15 patients in an attempt to correct the pathologic anatomy while avoiding the postoperative sequelae. Patients were divided into two groups: group A (N = 8) had surgery before age 2 (11.8 +/- 5.7 months), and group B (N = 7) had surgery after 2 years of age (64.3 +/- 24.2 months). No patient in group A required a secondary operative procedure for velopharyngeal incompetence. Normal speech was obtained in 75 percent (N = 6), and slight velopharyngeal incompetence not requiring secondary correction was obtained in 25 percent (N = 2). Group B obtained less dramatic speech results: normal in 14 percent (N = 1), slight velopharyngeal incompetence in 58 percent (N = 4), and no improvement or severe velopharyngeal incompetence requiring a secondary procedure in 28 percent (N = 2). Patients with preoperative otologic disorders (N = 10) obtained significant improvement in 90 percent of cases (p = 0.002). Early surgical intervention in patients with abnormal speech prior to age 2 appears to result in normal speech in the majority of instances. Late repair with levator repositioning and palatal lengthening provided improved speech in 72 percent of patients.  相似文献   

20.
Between 1980 and 1989, 82 velopharyngoplasties have been carried out in the Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery at the Medical University of Hannover. Speech results of 51 of these patients, including 39 patients with cleft lip and palate, could be followed up in the context of a clinical follow-up examination. Besides evaluation of speech results by two senior speech pathologists and two untrained listeners, a frequency analysis of the speech results with a sonograph was obtained. Nasal air loss was documented with a fogged-mirror test and computer aerometry. Whereas in 37 of 51 patients a normal or almost normal colloquial speech could be demonstrated, 30 of 39 patients with cleft lip and palate showed a normal or almost normal realization of the test sentences. Thirty of the 37 patients (81.08 percent) with normal or almost normal colloquial speech showed extensive mobility of the lateral pharyngeal wall. Symmetry of the velopharyngeal flaps seemed to have no influence on the speech result. With a fogged-mirror test, an average reduction of mirror fogging from 2.0 rings preoperatively to 0.9 rings postoperatively could be shown. In 31 patients, there was no longer any air loss postoperatively. Besides one rupture of a flap, two flaps had to be diminished in their lateral dimensions because of excessive size. We regard the cranially pedicled pharyngeal flap as an important operative procedure for improving speech results, especially in cleft lip and palate patients.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号