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This presentation will probably involve audience discussion, which will create action items. Use PowerPoint to keep track of these action items during your presentation In Slide Show, click on the right mouse button Select “Meeting Minder” Select the “Action Items” tab
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This presentation will probably involve audience discussion, which will create action items. Use PowerPoint to keep track of these action items during your presentation • In Slide Show, click on the right mouse button • Select “Meeting Minder” • Select the “Action Items” tab • Type in action items as they come up • Click OK to dismiss this box • This will automatically create an Action Item slide at the end of your presentation with your points entered. Cleft Lip: Primary and Secondary Deformities Nadia Afridi MD, BSc (Med) Kenneth Wilson MD, FRCSC
Historical background • Cleft lip • 1st repair • Unidentified Chinese surgeon • 390 AD • 1st description • 1300 AD • Straight line repair • Malgaigne • 1843 • Local flap closure • Mirault • Lateral flap to fill medial deficit • Basis of most modern techniques
Historical background • Cleft lip • Millard • 1955 • Concept: • Lateral flap advancement into upper lip • Downward rotation of medial segment • Preserves Cupid’s bow and philtral dimple • Tension of closure at alar base • Reduces nasal flare • Improved alveolar molding • Most popular method for unilateral lip closure
Embryology basics • Primary germ layers • Ectoderm • Cutaneous,
Embryology basics • Facial development • 4th to 10th week gestation • Fusion of five processes: • Unpaired frontonasal process • Nose and philtrum • Paired maxillary swellings • Cheeks and upper lip • Paired mandibular swellings • Lower face • Lower lip and chin
Embryology basics • Facial development • 6th week • Medial nasal processes migrate and fuse
Embryology of Clefting Facial Development 6th week Medial nasal processes(green)migrate toward each other and fuse 7th week Inferior tips of medial nasal processes expand laterally to form the intermaxillary process Tips of maxillary swellings (yellow) grow to meet the intermaxillary process and fuse Failure of maxillary swellings to fuse with intermaxillary process = cleft lip Clinical Aspects of Cleft Lip/Palate Reconstruction
Classification • Standardized methods • Key anatomic structure • Incisive foramen • Primary • Lip • Premaxilla • Alveolus • Secondary • Soft palate • Hard palate
Classification • Cleft of primary palate (cleft lip) • Unilateral • Incomplete • Lip only • Complete • Primary palate • Lip, nasal floor, alveolus
Classification • Cleft of primary palate (cleft lip) • Bilateral • Incomplete • Lip only • Complete • Primary palate • Lip, nasal floor, alveolus
Classification • Standardized methods • Kernahan • 1971 • “Striped Y” • Incisive foramen as focal point • Position 7 • Hard palate • Position 8 • Soft palate • Position 9 • Submucous cleft
Classification • Standardized methods • Millard modification
Epidemiology • Cleft lip and palate • Racial heterogeneity • Asians • 2.1 in 1000 live births • Whites • 1 in 1000 live births • African Americans • 0.41 in 1000 • Isolated cleft palate • Constant incidence • 0.5 in 1000 live births
Epidemiology • Relative incidence • Fraser and Calnan • 21% cleft lip • 46% cleft lip and palate • 33% cleft palate • Left > right > bilateral • 6:3:1
Epidemiology • Associated factors • Parental age • Incidence increases with age • Father’s age more significant • Risk highest with both parents over 30 years • Seasonal incidence • No strong evidence • Birth order • No evidence • Social class • High incidence in low socio economic status • Poor nutrition
Epidemiology • Associated factors • Parental head topography • Parents: • Underdeveloped maxillae • Flattened anterior surfaces • Trapezoidal/rectangular faces • Thin upper lips • Increased interorbital and intercoronoid process distance • Wide nasal cavity • Increased length of anterior cranial base
Epidemiology • Associated defects • Overall incidence of associated defects 29% • CNS malformations • Club foot • Cardiac abnormalities • Highest with isolated cleft palate
Etiology • Categorize cleft deformity • Malformation • Morphologic defect of organ or body region • Intrinsic error of morphogenesis • Disruption • Morphologic defect • Extrinsic breakdown of normal developmental process • Ie. infectious • Deformation • Abnormal form, shape or position caused by mechanical forces
Etiology • Categorize cleft deformity • Syndromic • More than one malformation • More than one developmental field • Non-syndromic • One defect • Multiple anomalies as a result of a single initiating event or primary malformation
Genetics • Associated syndromes • Stickler • Cleft palate alone • Autosomal dominant • Type 2 collagen gene mutation • Myopia, retinal detachment and glaucoma • Van der Woude’s syndrome • Autosomal dominant • Bilateral lower lip pits • Absence second molars
Genetics • Associated syndromes • Blepharo-cheilo-dontic syndrome • Eyelids • Euryblepharon • Ectropion • Lagophthalmia • Teeth • Oligodontia • Conical crown form • Autosomal dominant
Genetics • Non syndromic presentations • Cleft lip +/- palate • Different chromosome regions • 6p23 • 2q13 • 19q13.2 • Cleft palate alone • Recessive single major gene • ? 2q13/TGFA
Environmental agents • Chemical agents • Animal model • Alcohol • No increased risk of cleft with low quantities of EtOH • Increased risk of clefting with higher quantities of EtOH • Dilantin • 10X higher risk of cleft lip • Smoking • Dose response relationship • Increased risk of clefting
Environmental agents • Folic acid • Beneficial effect • Reduced incidence of unilateral cleft lip and palate with at risk mothers • Isotretinoin • Accutane dysmorphic syndrome • Rudimentary external ears • Absent/imperforate auditory canals • Triangular microcephalic skull • Cleft palate • Depressed midface • Brain/jaw/heart anomalies
Environmental agents • Altitude • Higher relative risk in highlands • Also microtia • Preauricular tags • Branchial arch anomaly complex • Constriction band • Anal atresia • Speculation • Chronic hypobaric hypoxia during embryologic and fetal development
Multifactorial model • Non mendelian inheritance • Concept of genetic susceptibility • Threshold determined by genetics and enviroment • Defect clusters in families • Risk for first degree relatives = population risk • Risk for second degree relatives = lower than first degree • Greater severity; increased recurrence • Increased number of affected relatives; increased risk • Risk of recurrence increased in relatives of less affected sex • Consanguinity increases risk
Prenatal diagnosis • Ultrasound • Late 1st trimester/early second trimester • 3.5 MHz scanner • Cleft lip/nose at 15 weeks • 6.5 MHz transvaginal scanner • 12 weeks • Controversy • Termination of pregancy • Northern Israel • 23/24 abortions • 1/24 couple would terminate if faced with situation again • Variation in culture
Timing of surgery • Rule of tens • 10 weeks of age • Allow lip tissues to develop • 10 lbs in weight • Hgb 10 g/dL (100 in our world!) • WBC less than 10,000
Anatomy • Millard • Critical anatomic features of unilateral cleft lip: • Cleft side • Premaxilla outwardly rotated • Lateral maxillary segment retropositioned • Inferior edge of septum dislocated out of vomer groove • Nasal spine in floor of nostril • Shortened columella
Anatomy • Millard • Critical anatomic features of unilateral cleft lip: • Cleft side • Lower lateral cartilage attenuated • Medial crus lower in columella • Dome rests below opposite alar cartilage • Lateral segment flattened and spread across cleft at obtuse angle • Alar crease continues through rim of ala • Alar base rotated outwardly in a flare
Anatomy • Millard • Critical anatomic features of unilateral cleft lip: • Cleft side • Skin curtain droops over alar rim • Reduces apparent height of columella • Deficient vestibular lining • Orbicularis oris ends upward at margin of cleft and inserts into alar wing • Incomplete cases muscle does not cross cleft • Short philtrum
Anatomy • Millard • Critical anatomic features of unilateral cleft lip: • Non cleft side • Shortened philtral height • Shortened columella • Two thirds of Cupid’s bow, one philtral column and a dimple hollow preserved • Hypoplastic muscle between philtral midline and cleft
Anatomy • Muscular deformity • Muscular bulge • Haphazard arrangement of muscle fibers • Transverse/oblique/anteroposterior • Orbicularis oris • Two well defined components • Deep orbicularis
Unilateral cleft lip • Evaluation and classification • Three categories of unilateral cleft lip: • Microform cleft lip • Incomplete cleft lip • Complete cleft lip • Associated nasal deformity: • Mild • Moderate • Severe
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