Cleft lip and cleft palate are among the most common birth anomalies affecting children in North America and worldwide. The incomplete formation of the upper lip (cleft lip) or roof of the mouth (cleft palate) can occur individually, or both defects may occur together. The conditions can vary in severity and may involve one or both sides of the mouth. Surgery is required to repair cleft lip and/or cleft palate.
Cleft lip repair and cleft palate repair are types of surgery used to correct this abnormal development and are meant to restore function to the lips and mouth along with producing a more normal appearance. Most clefts can be repaired through specialized plastic surgery techniques and will help to improve your child's ability to eat, speak, hear and breathe.
It is important to know that at the earliest stages feeding, growth, and development will be the most important priorities for your child's cleft-related care. Specialized bottles, or more rarely, feeding tubes, may be necessary to help your child eat well. Often, when a cleft palate is involved, the infant will not be able to feed at the breast like other infants due to problems with creating oral suction.
More than a cosmetic repair
Surgery to repair a cleft of the lip or palate is highly individualized. Surgery is intended to close the cleft defect, but also to help your child ability to function and grow normally. Cleft lip repair, also called cheiloplasty, includes reconstruction of the lip to create a more normal appearance, namely:p>
Closure of the cleft resulting in a scar located within or near the typical features of the upper lip
Formation of a cupid's bow (the curves along the center of the upper lip)
Establishing adequate distance between the upper lip and nose
Violence
Clefts of the upper lip typically affect the shape of the nose and additional procedures may be recommended to:
Restore nasal symmetry and nostril shape
Straighten and create adequate length for the columella (the tissue that separates the nostrils)
Because the palate creates the floor of the nasal cavity and is responsible for allowing normal speech, considerations in repairing a cleft palate include:
Separating the mouth and nasal tissues by closing the defect along its length
Re-establishing soft palate muscle function to promote normal speech
Recreating normal relation of the soft palate to the auditory canal and Eustachian tube to allow for normal hearing
Promoting as much as possible the normal growth and development of the upper jaw and teeth
Repairing, when appropriate, any defects in the gumline to allow for permanent tooth eruption