F. Mackay et al., DENTOFACIAL FORM IN THE 5-YEAR-OLD CHILD WITH UNILATERAL CLEFT-LIP AND PALATE, The Cleft palate-craniofacial journal, 31(5), 1994, pp. 372-375
It is generally believed that studies of outcome for children with cle
fts of the lip and palate should be based on patients who are in their
teens. This means that health care workers who look after these child
ren would have to wait many years until the quality of treatment could
be evaluated. In this study, significant differences between two cent
ers, Oslo and Manchester, in facial form at the age of 5 years were de
tected. Based on cephalometric analysis, children from Manchester were
more likely to have a retrognathic maxilla with the upper lip signifi
cantly behind the esthetic plane. An important future step may be the
setting up of ''reference centers'' with a large archive of database i
nformation for each racial group. This would assist smaller centers in
comparing their outcomes.