Journal of Cleft Lip Palate and Craniofacial Anomalies (Jan 2023)

Surgical technique to achieve postoperative alar base symmetry in complete bilateral cleft lip and alveolus repair – A prospective study

  • K S Krishna Kumar,
  • Shermil Sayd,
  • Suresh Vyloppilli,
  • Santhy Mohanachandran Nair,
  • Ajit Pati,
  • Anand Sivadasan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/jclpca.jclpca_11_23
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 2
pp. 80 – 85

Abstract

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Introduction: Children born with the bilateral cleft lip-cleft palate have a shortened columella and an elevated protruding premaxilla which results in an abnormal appearance of the nose. Materials and Methods: This study was conducted in the Baby MemorialHospital, Calicut, a Smile Train Center in India. After scrutiny, the eligible sample size amounted to30 cases. The patient's age rangedfrom 4 to 7 months. The basic technique employed is “Veau three straight line repair” technique. This study analyses the importance of a geometrical incision, a back cut extending cephalically above the inferior turbinate at the mucocutaneous junction to elevate the nostril floor, to achieve the symmetry of the alar bases. Result: Preoperative and postoperative anthropometric studies were conducted on the asymmetry and symmetry of the alar bases. The p values for the right side preoperative and postoperative measurement is 0.007 which is highly significant and for the left side, it is <0.001 which also denotes statistical significance of this technique. Conclusion: Further high volume multicentric studies may be suggested since bilateral cases amount for only 10% of the overall incidence of cleft lip cases and even high volume surgeons are privileged to treat only a few. Therefore, it is the obligation of every surgeon who undertakes the care of these children to learn from the past and to analyse results periodically, including comparison with other centres.

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