Objectives: (1) To determine the incidence rate of velopharyngeal dysfunction (VPD) according to 7 speech criteria post-Furlow palatoplasty. (2) To find an anatomical measurement of the cleft palate (or combination of measurements) associated with the occurrence of VPD. Study design: Retrospective cohort study. Participants and Methods: Fifty-six patients with cleft palate ± cleft lip underwent palatoplasty with the Furlow technique at the age of 10 months. Pre-and post-palatoplasty cleft palate measurements were collected during the procedure. Three blinded speech-language pathologists (SLPs) retrospectively scored the patients from the chart data at age 4. Student t test and receiver operating characteristic curve analysis were used to evaluate the association and predictive capacity between cleft measurements and parameters (M&P) with all VPD criteria. Results: The SLPs found an incidence of VPD according to 7 criteria: hypernasality (11%), audible nasal emission (4%), nasal rustle (14%), compensatory errors (4%), impairment of speech understandability (7%), and impairment of speech acceptability (16%). The SLPs recommended a secondary surgical procedure in 5 patients (9%). A statistically significant association was found between, respectively, 17 and 5 M&P and the occurrence of compensatory errors and audible nasal emission. Our data suggest that the length of the cleft, the cleft area, and the postoperative transversal size of the nasopharynx are the best indicators of the future positivity of VPD criteria. Conclusion: The size of the postoperative transverse nasopharyngeal area during the primary cleft palate procedure may become the focus of the next generation of cleft surgeons to reduce the incidence of VPD.
Objectives: (1) To assess the evolution of prepalatoplasty sleep oximetry (PRESO) and postpalatoplasty sleep oximetry (POSSO) in cleft patients and (2) to evaluate the impact of the size of the nasopharynx on PRESO and POSSO values. Study Design: Retrospective cohort study. Patients and Methods: In 81 patients with cleft palate and/or cleft lip, the following data were prospectively collected: patient demographics and prepalatoplasty cleft palate measurements. All the patients had at least 1 PRESO and POSSO. A Kaplan-Meier curve was obtained from all the sleep oximetry results. Transverse nasopharyngeal area (TNA) pre- and postvalues were compared for each group with paired t tests, while analysis of variance was used to compare TNA pre- and postscores between the groups with a Bonferroni correction for multiple comparisons. Results: POSSO results were normal or showed mild desaturations in most patients in the few weeks following palatoplasty. For the cohort, no statistically significant changes were found between PRESO and POSSO values. A 2-fold variation in the area of the TNA was found before palatoplasty within identical cleft malformation cases. No statistically significant association was found between the TNA or the a/30 − b 1 parameter values and the sleep study scores. Conclusions: The patients with the smaller nasopharyngeal areas presented identical PRESO and POSSO results when compared to those with larger nasopharyngeal sizes. Future studies should address the possible association between prepalatoplasty and postpalatoplasty TNAs and the occurrence of velopharyngeal deficiency later in life.
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