View clinical trials related to Cleft Lip.
Filter by:Evaluation of the effect of botulinum toxin type-A injection prior to surgical correction of complete unilateral cleftlip repair by modified millard cheiloplasty
The cleft lip and palate (CLP) is the commonest craniofacial anomaly worldwide. Nasoalveolar molding (NAM) therapy has emerged in the management of CLP as an early presurgical intervention to provide symmetry to severely deformed nasal cartilage, achieve projection to the flattened nasal tip, provide nonsurgical elevation for the columella, improve alignment of the alveolar ridge, reduce the cleft gap and it could significantly reduce the number of secondary surgeries. Despite that NAM therapy is becoming the treatment option for early cleft care, there is growing debate about its efficacy due to lack of quantitative assessment of these findings. To provide the highest levels of clinical evidence on NAM therapy, there has been international call for Randomized Controlled Clinical Trials. Statement of the problem: lack of quantitative data about the efficacy of the NAM therapy for unilateral CLP. Aim of the study: is to develop a standardized non-invasive quantitative assessment for two different techniques of the NAM therapy in Egyptian infants that involves 3D laser scanning/CAD analysis for maxillary geometry, and nasal anthropometric analysis. Methods Trial design: Prospective randomized controlled clinical trial (RCT). Settings: The RCT will be performed through two phases; (Phase I: A controlled pre and post-RCT that will be designed for the quantitative evaluation of the NAM therapy on the maxillary geometry), and (Phase II: A post-test RCT will be designed for the quantitative evaluation of the NAM therapy on the nasal anthropometry and comparing the outcome with the nasal anthropometry that will be performed to age matched Egyptian norms). Participants: 30 Egyptian infants with nonsyndromic UCLP will be randomly allocated to study groups (Group I, n=15) that will undergo NAM therapy before the primary surgical repair, and control group (n=15) that will undergo the primary surgical repair without NAM therapy. And 15 Egyptian infants will act as norm group. Follow-up: (phase I- T0: before NAM, T1: after 1 month and T2: before surgery). (Phase II- T"0: 10 days after surgery, and T"1: 6 months after surgery).
Newborns with unilateral cleft lip/ palate will be treated pre-surgically by Vacuum formed aligners in order to evaluate its effect on Nasoalveolar complex.
Emergence Delirium And Recovery Profile In Patients Undergoing Cleft Lip And Cleft Palate Repair With Either Combination Of Morphine Plus Fentanyl Or Fentanyl Alone
The purpose of this study is to evaluate effect of platelet rich plasma on scar formation of unilateral cleft lip repair.
Bilateral cleft lip and palate neonates will be randomly assigned to one of two groups: (gp1 presurgical Naso-alveolar molding (NAM) using Grayson method, gp 2 computer aided design NAM (CAD/NAM). The aim of the study is to compare between short term clinical effects of both interventions as regards alveolar alignment, nasal esthetics and interlabial gap.
The aim of this trial is to figure out the efficiency of modified Grayson NAM on parents' satisfaction, nasal esthetics, interlabial gap and maxillary arch changes. NAM might improve and facilitate the surgical procedure after lip closure. This might decrease the need of further interventions to improve esthetics and function of CLP patients. This trial will help the patients and practitioners in taking the decision of inclusion of NAM in the CLP treatment protocol as a mandatory step or skip a useless procedure with all of its burden.
Patients with cleft lip and palate frequently develop Class III (Cl III) malocclusions or underbites following early cleft repair surgeries. This clinical trial compares the current standard of care for treating the Cl III malocclusion, orthognathic (jaw) surgery after pubertal growth (16-21 years), with an alternative orthopedic approach to protract the maxilla during adolescence (11-14 years). At Children's Hospital Los Angeles(CHLA), early adolescents with cleft lip and palate and Cl III malocclusion are offered an alternative non-surgical approach to correct the malocclusion called "maxillary protraction". Prior to age 14, the maxillary sutures have not fused and can be mobilized by alternating weekly expansion and constriction with a rapid palatal expander (RPE), thereby allowing the upper jaw (maxilla) to be pulled forward (protracted) to correct the underbite. This prospective parallel cohort study will assess the patients undergoing treatment for the Cl III malocclusion by either orthognathic surgery or maxillary protraction at four data collection time points during treatment. The data includes digitized study models, photographs and radiographs, quality of life surveys (SF12, YQOL), parent surveys (ASEBA), treatment cost, periodontal measurements and treatment complications. The study design is a descriptive cohort study that examines the success of treatment (% not requiring a second surgery), the dental and skeletal changes associated with treatment, the stability of treatment and the behavioural/adaptive factors (ASEBA) that contribute to success and lack of success for each treatment. The primary trial will be conducted at Children's Hospital Los Angeles and a pilot study to confirm translation to different settings will be conducted at Seattle Children's Hospital.
The Allied Cleft & Craniofacial Quality-Improvement and Research Network (ACCQUIREnet) is a group of multidisciplinary cleft teams that have implemented a system for prospective collection of outcomes data, based on the ICHOM Standard Set for the Comprehensive Appraisal of Cleft Care, CLEFT-Q, and other outcomes instruments. Participating cleft teams may analyze clinical and psychosocial outcomes related to care of the child with cleft lip and/or palate (CL/P), compare its performance with those of other cleft centers, and identify opportunities for quality improvement.
this study will be undertaken to evaluate the safety and analgesic efficacy of adding ketamine to bupivacaine in bilateral infra-orbital nerve block for relief of pain postoperatively following repair of cleft lip in children less than two years of age.