Etiology
- Family history and 1st degree relatives
- Environmental factors – maternal epilepsy, drugs (steroids, diazepam), teratogens (thalidomide)
- Can be part of Pierre Robin syndrome
- isolated cleft palate, micrognathia, posteriorly displaced tongue, respiratory and feeding issues
Classification
- LAHSHAL – anatomic classification according site, size, extent and type of cleft
- Upper case signifies complete cleft
- Lower case signifies incomplete cleft
Cleft lip – due to disruption of muscles of the upper lip and nasiolabial region
Muscle rings of Delaire- Nasolabial muscles
- 1. Transverse labialis
- 2. Levator labii superioris alaeques nasi
- 3. Levator labii superioris
- Bilabial muscles
- 4. Orbicularis oris – oblique head (upper lip)
- 5. Orbicularis oris – horizontal head (upper lip)
- 6. Orbicularis oris – lower lip
- Labiomental muscles
- 7. Depressor anguli oris
- 8. Depressor labii inferioris
- 9. Mentalis
Types of Cleft Lip
- Unilateral – rings 1 and 2 disrupted on one side
- Asymmetry of external nasal cartilage, nasal septum, maxilla
- Displacement of nasal skin onto lip and retraction of labial skin
- Bilateral – rings 1and 2 disrupted on both sides
- Upper and lower
- Complete and incomplete – whether it extends to nostrils or not
- Simple or alveolar – if it involves bony alveolus or not
- Complicated or uncomplicated – if it is associated with cleft palate or not
Cleft palate
- Embryologically
- 1o palate – structure anterior to incisive foramen (alveolus + upper lip)
- 2o palate – structures posterior to incisive foramen (hard + soft palate)
- Anatomy of soft palate
- Muscle fibres of soft palate are oriented transversely with no significant attachment to the hard palate
- Anatomy of hard palate – 3 layers
- Palatal fibromucosa, maxillary fibromucosa and gingival fibromucosa
- Failure of fusion of 2 palatine processes (PP) – results in different types
- Complete (type I) – failure of fusion of premaxilla and 2 PPs
- Incomplete (type II) – incomplete fusion of premaxilla and 2 PPs
- IIa – results in bifid uvula
- IIb – results in bifid soft palate
- IIc – results in bifid soft palate and posterior hard palate
Complications
- Impaired feeding – difficult suckling
- Wide pharynx – regurgitation of food
- Difficult speech – especially consonants D, P, T, B, K, J
- Nose and teeth malformation
- Pierre Robin Syn
Treatment
Cleft lip
- Attention to feeding – special spoon
- Millards operation – performed if criteria is fulfilled
- Bare the edge of the cleft to create a raw surface in zig-zag pattern
- Dissect the lip from the maxilla by an incision done in the gingivo-labial fold
- Suture the cleft in 3 layers – skin to skin, muscle to muscle, mucous membrane to mucous membrane
- Aim is to get the vermillion of the lip in alignment
Cleft lip revision – delayed for at least 2 years after 1st operation
- To improve 1o reconstruction
- Indications – lip deformities, misaligned vermillion, deviated nasal septum, nasal deformity
Cleft palate
- Surgery done at 3-6 months (not before as tissues are still delicate)
- Langerbeck Repair
- Bare edges of cleft
- Release incisions are done on either side of palate on the oral mucoperiosteum
- Closure of the cleft in layers – first the nasal mucosa, then mucoperiosteum of the hard palate
- Delaire technique and sequence
- Cleft lip alone
- Unilateral – 1 operation at 5-6 months
- Bilateral – 1 operation at 4-5 months
- Cleft palate alone
- Soft palate – 1 operation at 6 months
- Soft and hard palates – 1 soft palate operation at 6 months and 1 hard palate operation at 15 months
- Cleft lip and cleft palate
- 2 operations – cleft lip and soft palate at 6 months, then hard palate operation at 18 months
- Cleft lip alone
Secondary management
- Hearing – patients have higher incidence of sensorineural and conductive hearing loss
- Speech problems
- Dental – delayed teeth eruption