| Literature DB >> 35611095 |
Hong Loi Nguyen1, Minh Phuong Hoang2, Van Minh Nguyen2, Tan Tai Tran2, Van Son Le3.
Abstract
Background: The most common facial defect is the congenital cleft lip (CL), which can occur with or without a cleft palate (CP). Patients need primary plastic surgery for rehabilitation and esthetics; nevertheless, secondary abnormalities of the lip and nose may develop after primary surgery. These deformities are complex and involve all tissue layers, including the skeletal platform, inner lining, osseocartilaginous structure, and overlying skin. This study evaluated the results of nasal deformity rhinoplasty using septal cartilage in patients with nasal deformities after plastic surgery for unilateral CL and CP.Entities:
Keywords: nasal deformity; secondary rhinoplasty; septal cartilage; unilateral cleft deformity
Year: 2022 PMID: 35611095 PMCID: PMC9124478 DOI: 10.2147/CCIDE.S364332
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Cosmet Investig Dent ISSN: 1179-1357
Figure 1This image illustrates the outcome measurement. A: the highest point on the nasal dome; A’: the midpoint of the base of the columella corresponds to the lower border of the nasal septum; B: the base of the nose on the non-cleft side; B’: the base of the nose on the cleft side; O: the intersection point between the columella and the horizontal line passing through the highest point of the 2 nostrils; OA’: columella height; AA’: nasal height; A’B: width of the alar base on the non-cleft side; A’B’: width of the alar base on the cleft side; AB: length of the alar on the non-cleft side; AB’: length of the alar on the cleft side.
Figure 2Surgical techniques. (A) The patient undergoes oral endotracheal anesthesia; (B) Making an incision; (C and D) Exposing the septal cartilage, (E) Shaping the grafting cartilage; (F) Positioning the graft to reform the nose; (G) Closuring with Vicryl 5–0 and Nylon 6–0; (H) Placing the nasal conformer.
Remaining Nasal Deformity Characteristics After Unilateral Cleft Lip Surgery
| Nasal Deformity Characteristics | n (%) |
|---|---|
| Asymmetric nasal tip | 15 (71.4%) |
| Flat ala | 21 (100%) |
| Wide nasal base | 18 (85.7%) |
| Low alar base | 3 (14.3%) |
Columella and Nasal Height (7 Days After Surgery)
| Height | n | Mean (mm) | Range (mm) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Columella (OA’) | Preoperative | 21 | 6.86 | 5.0–11.5 |
| Postoperative | 21 | 9.67 | 6.5–15.5 | |
| p-value | 0.0042 | |||
| Nasal (AA’) | Preoperative | 21 | 15.62 | 12.5–21 |
| Postoperative | 21 | 19.02 | 15.5–23 | |
| p-value | 0.0007 | |||
Width of Alar Base (7 Days After Surgery)
| Width of Alar Base | n | Mean (mm) | Range (mm) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pair 1 | Non-cleft side | 21 | 15.74 | 12.5–20.0 |
| Cleft side | 21 | 17.55 | 14.0–21.5 | |
| p-value | 0.0055 | |||
| Pair 2 | Preoperative cleft side | 21 | 17.55 | 14.0–21.5 |
| Postoperative cleft side | 21 | 15.83 | 12.5–20.5 | |
| p-value | 0.0088 | |||
| Pair 3 | Preoperative non-cleft side | 21 | 15.74 | 12.5–20.0 |
| Postoperative non-cleft side | 21 | 15.83 | 12.5–20.5 | |
| p-value | 0.8848 | |||
Nasal Alar Length (7 Days After Surgery)
| Nasal Alar Length | n | Mean (mm) | Range (mm) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Non-cleft side | Preoperative | 21 | 24.21 | 22.0–28.0 |
| Postoperative | 21 | 26.64 | 23.0–30.0 | |
| p-value | 0.0069 | |||
| Cleft side | Preoperative | 21 | 26.29 | 24.0–30.5 |
| Postoperative | 21 | 26.81 | 23.0–31.0 | |
| p-value | 0.5452 | |||
Figure 3Nasal deformity on the right side. Front and basal view photographs taken preoperatively (A), 7 days postoperatively (B), and 3 months postoperatively (C).
Figure 4Nasal deformity on the left side. Front and basal view photographs taken preoperatively (A), 7 days postoperatively (B), and 3 months postoperatively (C).