Craniofacial anthropometry using the 3dMDface System is valid and reliable. Digital measurements of upper prolabial width may require direct marking, prior to imaging, to improve landmark identification.
The primary objective of cleft palate repair is velopharyngeal competence without fistula. The reported incidence of fistula and velopharyngeal insufficiency (VPI) is variable. Our purpose was to assess the senior surgeon's 29-year palatoplasty experience with respect to incidence of fistula and VPI. Our hypotheses were that VPI is related to (1) age at palatoplasty, (2) cleft palate type, and (3) VPI and palatal fistula incidence decrease with the surgeon's experience. We reviewed the records of all children with cleft palate treated by the senior author between 1976 and 2004. Cleft palate was categorized according to Veau. Palatoplasty was performed on 449 patients, using a 2-flap technique with muscular retropositioning. The mean age at palatoplasty was 11.6 +/- 4.9 months (range, 7.0-46.4 months). The incidence of palatal fistula was 2.9%, and velopharyngeal sufficiency was found in 85.1% of patients. We found a significant association between age at palatoplasty and VPI (P = 0.009, odds ratio, 1.06 [95% confidence interval, 1.02-1.10]). Velopharyngeal insufficiency was also associated with the Veau hierarchy (P = 0.001). Incidence of VPI was independent of surgeon experience (P = 0.2). In conclusion, the incidence of palatal fistula was low. Velopharyngeal insufficiency was associated with increasing age at palatoplasty and with the Veau hierarchy.
ObjectSuturectomy as a treatment for craniosynostosis was largely replaced in the late twentieth century by more extensive, but predictable, cranial remodeling procedures. Recent technical innovations, such as using the endoscope combined with postoperative orthotic reshaping, have led to a resurgence of interest in suturectomy as a safer, less invasive method.MethodsA retrospective chart review was performed for all cases of sagittal synostosis treated with endoscopic sagittal suture strip craniectomy and helmet therapy between 2004 and 2008. Data collected included gestational age, genetic evaluations and syndromic status, age at operation, duration of procedure, need for blood transfusions, length of hospital stay, preoperative and postoperative head circumference percentile and cranial index, duration of helmet use, length of follow-up, complications, and revisions.ResultsFifty-six patients with isolated sagittal synostosis were treated using endoscopic suturectomy and completed helmet therapy. Mean age at time of procedure was 3.24 months. Mean operative duration was 45.32 minutes. Mean hospital stay was 1.39 days. There were 2 transfusions and no deaths. The mean length of follow-up was 2.34 years. Helmet therapy was instituted for a mean of 7.47 months. Head circumference percentile increased from 61.42% to 89.27% over 2 years of follow-up. Cranial index increased from a preoperative mean of 0.69 to 0.76 over 2 years of follow-up. Reoperations for synostosis included 1 sagittal suture refusion and 2 cases in which other sutures fused.ConclusionsSagittal synostosis can be safely treated with endoscopic suturectomy and helmet therapy. Improvements in cranial volume and shape are comparable to open procedures and are enduring.
Localized cutaneous infantile hemangioma acts like a tissue expander. This rapidly growing tumor can destroy elastic fibers or cause ulceration resulting in telangiectases, cutaneous laxity, scarring, and fibrofatty residuum. Although surgeons may dispute indications and timing, most would agree that the scar of resection should be minimized. For this reason, circular excision and purse-string closure is particularly applicable for hemangioma at any stage of its evolution. The purposes of this study were to: (1) analyze the results of circular excision/purse-string closure in all three phases of the life cycle of hemangioma; (2) quantify dimensional changes after resection; and (3) compare the scars after theoretical single-stage lenticular excision with those after staged circular excision/purse-string closure. The authors retrospectively analyzed their experience in 25 children with localized hemangioma who underwent circular excision/purse-string closure from 1997 to 2000. Each hemangioma was measured preoperatively and the scars were measured at most recent follow-up (minimum, 6 months). Preoperative and postoperative dimensions were analyzed using SPSS statistical software. The study included 22 girls and three boys, with an average time to follow-up evaluation of 13.1 months. Twenty-one lesions were in the face and scalp, and five were in the extremity. Five tumors were resected in the proliferative phase (either because of ulceration, bleeding, or visual complications) and 21 were excised in the involuting or involuted phase. Six patients had a second-stage procedure: three had another circular excision and three had later lenticular excision. After single circular excision/purse-string closure, the mean long-axial diameter (length) decreased by 45 percent, the mean short-axial width (width) decreased by 73 percent, and the mean scar area was only 15 percent of the original area. All these differences were statistically significant (p = 0.001). The average width/length ratio decreased by 50 percent, indicating a tendency for scars to linearize. There was no difference in linearization for the three phases of hemangioma (p > 0.05); extremity scars became more linear that those on the face (p = 0.01). The authors devised a formula for scar length after lenticular excision/linear closure, assuming a conventional excisional ratio of 3:1 for a circular lesion. Using this equation, the authors predicted that mean scar length after circular excision, followed by lenticular excision, would be 72 percent shorter than the calculated scar that would result from conventional lenticular excision. In three patients who underwent this two-stage approach, the resultant scar was 69 percent shorter. Circular excision of hemangioma and purse-string closure reduces both the longitudinal and transverse dimensions and converts a large circular lesion into a small ellipsoid scar. If subsequent revision to a linear scar is desirable, its length will be the same or slightly less than the diameter of the original lesion. No other e...
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