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About
Cleft lip and palate is the most common facial birth defect affecting one in 700 babies, and frequently leads to problems in feeding, breathing, speech and/or hearing, and aesthetic problems often leading to social and psychological problems. Poor growth of the upper jaw affects nearly all patients with the condition, and can result in substantial misalignment of the teeth requiring corrective surgery and associated dental treatment in early adulthood.
Surprisingly there is little evidence to support the current practice of delaying surgery until early adulthood. It is apparently left until then because it is assumed this is when the skull and face have stopped growing, but there is little available information on that growth and when the different parts of the face and skull stop growing.
The goal of this study is to develop and test new computer-based methods to quantify skull growth and related soft- tissues changes. This pilot work will demonstrate whether it is possible to measure these developments and prepare the tools for a larger clinical study. That clinical study will determine the full nature and extent of bone growth and related soft-tissue changes during late adolescence, to identify if/when earlier surgery could be carried out to correct any deformity and minimise the associated social stigmas of the condition.
Full description
OVERVIEW
The study will involve a three arm parallel cohort study considering patients with the following conditions:
DATA CAPTURE
a. MRI data will be obtained (for 10 subjects in each group) at age T0 and one year afterwards (T1). This will provide accurate geometries to properly test the techniques. The use of MRI scan data avoids the need for unnecessary exposure of patients to ionizing radiation, it also allows the relationship between hard and soft tissues to be observed.
b. The same 10 patients in (a) will undergo an intra-oral scan captured using a Trios intraoral scanner (3Shape, Aarhus, Denmark) which uses ultrafast optical sectioning technology (non-invasive) to provide a 3D image of the dentition and dental occlusion and facial stereophotogrammetry scan (Vectra H1 3D camera) for soft-tissue texture information at ages T0 and T1.
3D DATA ANALYSIS
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1 participants in 3 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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