Publication date: Available online 26 December 2018
Source: Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Medicine, and Pathology
Author(s): Yoshihito Matsui, Kenichi Kurita, Koki Imaoka, Hiroyuki Hanai, Shoya Mizuno, Yoshiko Katayama, Masahito Maeda, Atsushi Nakayama, Chisako Inoue
Abstract
Objective
It has been reported that two-stage palatoplasty is excellent in terms of maxillary growth but poor in terms of speech outcomes. We modified the two-stage Zurich approach in two aspects. First, the speech plate is placed immediately after soft palatoplasty using Perko's technique to prevent air leakage through the nose in all cases. The other is that simultaneous closure of the alveolar and hard palate cleft with bone grafting is delayed until age ≥8 years to allow maxillary growth. In this paper we report on postoperative velopharyngeal function and role of the speech plate.
Methods
We investigated velopharyngeal function in 30 consecutive complete unilateral cleft lip and palate patients in three phases (A, B, C): Phase A, at age 5–6 years; Phase B, immediately before simultaneous hard palate closure with alveolar cleft bone grafting; and Phase C, after complete closure of the alveolar and hard palate cleft.
Results
Velopharyngeal function was 83% in phase A, 97% in phase B and 100% in phase C. Three patients underwent pharyngeal flap surgery before phase B. All patients could use speech plates. Speech plate placement earlier after soft palatoplasty produces better velopharyngeal function at age 5–6 years.
Conclusions
We obtained the same success rate as other palatoplasties such as pushback or Furlow's technique in terms of velopharyngeal function, demonstrating the importance of early speech plate placement.
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