Stability of maxillary advancement via distraction osteogenesis in cleft lip and palate patients: report of two cases

Introduction: Cleft lip and palate often results in midface hypoplasia and class III skeletal pattern. Maxillary hypoplasia resulting in skeletal class III malocclusion is high among patients with cleft lip and palate. Treatment is usually with Le Fort I advancement with/with out mandibular setback...

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Main Authors: Chi Adam, Khairul Bariah, Hariri, Firdaus, Rahman, Zainal A
Format: Article
Language:English
English
English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://irep.iium.edu.my/58106/
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spelling iium-581062018-03-24T19:01:20Z http://irep.iium.edu.my/58106/ Stability of maxillary advancement via distraction osteogenesis in cleft lip and palate patients: report of two cases Chi Adam, Khairul Bariah Hariri, Firdaus Rahman, Zainal A RK529 Oral Surgery-General Works Introduction: Cleft lip and palate often results in midface hypoplasia and class III skeletal pattern. Maxillary hypoplasia resulting in skeletal class III malocclusion is high among patients with cleft lip and palate. Treatment is usually with Le Fort I advancement with/with out mandibular setback However, the stability of maxillary advancement with Le Fort I surgery is unpredictable and is known for high percentage of relapse. Therefore, this article reports two cases of distraction osteogenesis of the maxilla to correct the skeletal discrepancies. Method: 2 cases of cleft lip and palate patients with severe skeletal class III discrepancies were treated with maxillary advancement via Le Fort I osteotomy followed by distraction osteogenesis. Results: The cephalometric measurements were re-recorded after 1 year to quantify relapse. No significant relapse noticed. Clinically, there were marked improvement in dentofacial structures and results were stable following review after 1 year. Conclusion: This case report highlights the choice of treatment using distraction osteogenesis on the maxilla in two cleft lip and palate patients to correct skeletal discrepancy. Maxillary advancement via distraction osteogenesis seems to provide a significant structural improvement and stable results for patients with cleft lip and palate. Distraction osteogenesis is a useful method for bone regeneration and is a popular technique for treatment of craniofacial skeletal dysplasia, especially in patients with cleft lip and palate. 2017-11 Article NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/58106/1/attachments.zip application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/58106/2/stability%20cleft%20%20%20maxilla.pdf application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/58106/3/wuhan%20book.pdf Chi Adam, Khairul Bariah and Hariri, Firdaus and Rahman, Zainal A (2017) Stability of maxillary advancement via distraction osteogenesis in cleft lip and palate patients: report of two cases. 11th World Cleftlip/Palate and Craniofacial Congress, na (na). p. 198.
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Local University
institution International Islamic University Malaysia
building IIUM Repository
collection Online Access
language English
English
English
topic RK529 Oral Surgery-General Works
spellingShingle RK529 Oral Surgery-General Works
Chi Adam, Khairul Bariah
Hariri, Firdaus
Rahman, Zainal A
Stability of maxillary advancement via distraction osteogenesis in cleft lip and palate patients: report of two cases
description Introduction: Cleft lip and palate often results in midface hypoplasia and class III skeletal pattern. Maxillary hypoplasia resulting in skeletal class III malocclusion is high among patients with cleft lip and palate. Treatment is usually with Le Fort I advancement with/with out mandibular setback However, the stability of maxillary advancement with Le Fort I surgery is unpredictable and is known for high percentage of relapse. Therefore, this article reports two cases of distraction osteogenesis of the maxilla to correct the skeletal discrepancies. Method: 2 cases of cleft lip and palate patients with severe skeletal class III discrepancies were treated with maxillary advancement via Le Fort I osteotomy followed by distraction osteogenesis. Results: The cephalometric measurements were re-recorded after 1 year to quantify relapse. No significant relapse noticed. Clinically, there were marked improvement in dentofacial structures and results were stable following review after 1 year. Conclusion: This case report highlights the choice of treatment using distraction osteogenesis on the maxilla in two cleft lip and palate patients to correct skeletal discrepancy. Maxillary advancement via distraction osteogenesis seems to provide a significant structural improvement and stable results for patients with cleft lip and palate. Distraction osteogenesis is a useful method for bone regeneration and is a popular technique for treatment of craniofacial skeletal dysplasia, especially in patients with cleft lip and palate.
format Article
author Chi Adam, Khairul Bariah
Hariri, Firdaus
Rahman, Zainal A
author_facet Chi Adam, Khairul Bariah
Hariri, Firdaus
Rahman, Zainal A
author_sort Chi Adam, Khairul Bariah
title Stability of maxillary advancement via distraction osteogenesis in cleft lip and palate patients: report of two cases
title_short Stability of maxillary advancement via distraction osteogenesis in cleft lip and palate patients: report of two cases
title_full Stability of maxillary advancement via distraction osteogenesis in cleft lip and palate patients: report of two cases
title_fullStr Stability of maxillary advancement via distraction osteogenesis in cleft lip and palate patients: report of two cases
title_full_unstemmed Stability of maxillary advancement via distraction osteogenesis in cleft lip and palate patients: report of two cases
title_sort stability of maxillary advancement via distraction osteogenesis in cleft lip and palate patients: report of two cases
publishDate 2017
url http://irep.iium.edu.my/58106/
http://irep.iium.edu.my/58106/1/attachments.zip
http://irep.iium.edu.my/58106/2/stability%20cleft%20%20%20maxilla.pdf
http://irep.iium.edu.my/58106/3/wuhan%20book.pdf
first_indexed 2023-09-18T21:22:08Z
last_indexed 2023-09-18T21:22:08Z
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