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The purpose of this study was to categorize and compare outcomes and sequels in 2 groups of patients born with unilateral and bilateral complete cleft lip/palate, having their primary cleft palate repair performed in our hospital, by the same surgical team, during 2 different periods of time, to establish which of the 2 surgical reconstructive strategies employed was more effective to decrease sequels.
This is a randomized clinical trial including a total of 291, nonsyndromic patients, primary assisted in our Hospital, between 2002 and 2013, and operated by the same senior surgeon.Two groups of patients of similar characteristics were treated utilizing 2 different surgical procedures according to the considered period. Isolated palates, syndromic patients, secondary and adult cases were considered as exclusion critters. Surgical data was obtained from medical records, and clinical examinations. All the patients were cautiously evaluated by a team expert to verify results, evolution, and sequels.
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Variations in the clinical presentation of the unilateral cleft lip resulted in numerous surgical repair techniques used around the world. No universally accepted method exists to evaluate aesthetic surgical results. The purpose of this study is to use the Hubli lip grading system, developed by Smile Train, to evaluate the aesthetic results of unilateral cleft lip repairs based on the surgical technique used.
A retrospective review was conducted of unilateral cleft lip repair operations performed by Smile Train surgeons throughout Africa, Americas, Asia Pacific, and Europe and Middle East between 2014 and 2018. Using the Hubli lip grading criteria, factoring in cleft severity, acceptable outcomes were identified and compared with the surgical technique used.
Eight thousand forty-one unilateral cleft lip repairs were reviewed. The majority utilized the rotational advancement technique (n = 5541, 68.9%) with a statistically significant percentage of acceptable outcomes (92.1%), followed by an acceptance rhe world.The objective of this study is to validate the proof of concept of a 3-dimensional (3D)-printed temporal mandibular joint (TMJ) for use in mandibular distraction in patients with severe craniofacial microsomia (CFM). Patients with Pruzansky-Kaban IIB and III have severe condylar dysplasia and abnormal or absent TMJs, often resulting in upper airway obstruction during infancy. As these patients progress, they require subsequent surgeries to correct facial asymmetry and TMJ function. While studies have shown promising outcomes with costochondral grafting or mandibular distraction without a TMJ in the setting of patients with Pruzansky-Kaban IIB and III it is often unsuccessful in avoiding tracheostomy during infancy. Using an adult head and neck cadaver, the right condylar head was removed to emulate a Pruzansky-Kaban III mandible. A 3D model of an adult skull was obtained. The 3D TMJ was replaced into the cadaver and KLS distractor applied in the vertical orientation. The authors achieved adequate distraction using a 3D-printed TMJ. hypoxia-inducible factor pathway The 3D structure developed here can potentially be used for clinical application in CFM patients with absent or rudimentary TMJ for distraction and further avoidance of the need for tracheostomy for airway obstruction.The recurrence of chronic subdural hematoma (CSDH) is high post-treatment. In this study, we aimed to construct individualized models for prediction of the postoperative recurrence of CSDH in patients underwent twist-drill craniostomy combined with urokinase (UK) instillation. In total, 183 patients with CSDH were retrospectively enrolled. In summary, 21 candidate factors were retrieved from past medical records. The least absolute shrinkage and selection operator regression was adopted to reduce the high dimensionality of data. Four predictors preoperative hematoma volume, encephalatrophy, brain re-expansion, and UK instillation frequency were filtered from the 21 candidate factors using the least absolute shrinkage and selection operator method. Binary logistic regression model was employed to establish preoperative and postoperative prediction models. The preoperative model included preoperative hematoma volume and encephalatrophy whereas the postoperative model included brain re-expansion and UK instillation frequency. The predictive performance of the nomograms was evaluated by the receiver operating characteristic curve and calibration chart. Area under curve of the preoperative and postoperative models were 0.755 (95% confidence interval 0.690-0.889) and 0.782 (95% confidence interval 0.720-0.936), respectively, indicating good discrimination ability. The calibration results showed good fitting between the predicted probability and the actual probability. Finally, a decision curve analysis revealed excellent clinical performance of the proposed nomograms. Functionally, the preoperative model was used to identify high-risk patients with CSDH and application of UK, while the postoperative model was applied to guide physician-patients communication during follow-up. These 2 prediction models provide a basis for further clinical and experimental studies.
Maxillary osteotomy is typically undertaken to correct abnormal facial growth in cleft lip and palate. The surgery can cause velopharyngeal insufficiency resulting in hypernasality. This study aims to identify valid predictors of acquired velopharyngeal insufficiency following maxillary osteotomy by using a range of perceptual and instrumental speech investigations and multiple regression.
A prospective study was undertaken consisting of a consecutive series of patients with cleft lip and palate (N = 20) undergoing maxillary osteotomy by a single surgeon. Participants were seen at 0 to 3 months pre-surgery (T1), 3-months (T2), and 12-months (T3) post-surgery. Hypernasality was rated using the cleft audit protocol for speech-augmented (CAPS-A) and visual analog scales, and nasalance was measured on the Nasometer II 6400. For lateral videofluorosopic and nasendoscopic images, visual perceptual ratings and quantitative ratiometric measurements were undertaken. Multiple regression analyses were undertaken to identify predictors.