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UnknownNCT03891719

Correction of the Unilateral Cleft Lip Nasal Deformity With Sliding Chondrocutaneous Flap and Autologous Cartilage Graft

Correction of the Unilateral Cleft Lip Nasal Deformity Using Sliding Chondrocutaneous Flap, Caudal Septal Extension Graft and Auricular Cartilage Graft

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
35 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of Medicine and Pharmacy at Ho Chi Minh City · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
14 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Cleft lip and cleft palate are the most common birth defects of craniofacial development. The surgical repair of this deformity requires comprehensive management plans and well cooperating interdisciplinary cleft teams. Secondary cleft rhinoplasty remains one of the most challenging procedures and aims for restoring nostril symmetry, enhancing nasal function, and improvement of aesthetic outcomes.

Detailed description

For the majority of cleft patients, surgeons usually delay secondary rhinoplasty to ages 14 to 16 years for females and 16 to 18 years for males until after completion of nasal growth Unilateral secondary cleft nasal deformity results from hypoplastic nasal tissue, asymmetric growth due to impaired growth, and surgical scarring. The most common deformities include caudal septal deviation, retrodisplacement and under-projection of dome, lateral slumping of the medial crus of the lower lateral cartilage, alar-columellar web, insufficiency of vestibular skin and deficiency of nasal floor. Moreover, these deformities have negative effect on human well-being and quality of life. Despite the opinions on how to address the problems, it seems clear that repositioning and reshaping of the cleft-side cartilages is necessary for restoring form and function. In general, in order to there are two basic approaches: those techniques that move the cleft-side lower lateral cartilage from medial to lateral, and those that move the lower lateral cartilage from lateral to medial. In an effort to correct the vestibular lining deficiency, easily be adapted to combine Tajima's reverse-U incisions for treatment of alar hooding, need for other structural grafts, sliding chondrocutaneous flap offers many advantages. However, in order to improve nasal tip position or columella shape through modification of either the anterior septal and/or posterior septal angle position and to act as the fundamental attachment for sliding lower lateral cartilage, Caudal septal extension and Columellar strut graft play an important role to stabilize the nasal tip. Besides, with the aim of making it harmonize better with other facial features, dorsal augmentation is needed for improving the shape of the nose. Selecting the optimal material continues to be a challenge. For most surgeons, an autogenous cartilage graft is the first choice in rhinoplasty because of its resistance to infection and resorption. We assess the functional and aesthetic outcomes based on three criteria: 1. Change in nose symmetry and nasal height (Preoperative and postoperative photographic analyses) 2. Change in functional outcomes through subjective and objective measurement (Questionaire and acoustic rhinometry) 3. Change in Quality of life (Rhinoplasty Outcome Evaluation Questionaire)

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
PROCEDUREUnilateral cleft lip rhinoplasty* Perform marking with methylene blue tattoo marks * Inject Local anesthetic solution with epinephrine * Harvest auricular cartilage * Make the incisions parallel the lip scar, extende into the marginal incision and encompass any alar webbing. The incisions outline the entirety of the lower lateral cartilage and create sliding chondrocutaneous flap. This flap combines with reverse U incision. * Harvest septal bony cartilaginous unit for grafting the caudal septum and suspend the medial crural cartilages * Create dome symmetry at the cartilage level and reconstruct nasal tip with other grafts (shield-type tip graft, cap graft, alar batten graft) * Dorsal augmentation * Lip reconstruction and alar base repositioning. * Closure and repair vestibular deficiency with the reverse-U component of the chondrocutaneous flap at the alar rim.

Timeline

Start date
2019-07-01
Primary completion
2022-12-01
Completion
2023-11-01
First posted
2019-03-27
Last updated
2021-02-10

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Vietnam

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03891719. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.