Le Fort I Osteotomy in Cleft Patients: Maxillary Advancement and Articulation

J Craniofac Surg. 2022 Mar-Apr;33(2):597-601. doi: 10.1097/SCS.0000000000008081.

Abstract

Background: Maxillary advancement may affect speech in cleft patients.

Aims: To examine whether the amount of maxillary advancement and preoperativecephalometric skeletal and dentoalveolar relationships are associated with articulation errors of the Finnish alveolar consonants /s/, /l/, and /r/ in cleft patients.

Materials and methods: Fifty-seven nonsyndromic cleft patients who underwent Le Fort I or bimaxillary osteotomies were evaluated retrospectively. Pre- and post-operative lateral cephalometric radiographs and standardized speech video recordings were analyzed. The Aspin-Welch unequal variance t test, Student t test sign test, intraclass correlation and Kappa statistics were used in the statistical analyses.

Results: The mean advancement of the maxilla (point A) was 4.65 mm horizontally (range -2.80 to 11.30) and -3.82 mm vertically (range -14.20 to 3.90). The overall articulation (especially the sounds /s/ and /l/) improved significantly postoperatively, but the amount of maxillary advancement did not affect the articulation. The preoperative mean percentages of /s/, /l/, and /r/ errors were 32%, 33%, 46% and the postoperative percentages 23%, 19%, 40%, respectively. Preoperative articulation errors of /s/ were related to palatal inclination of the upper incisors.

Conclusions: Orthognathic surgery may improve articulation errors. The amount of maxillary advancement is not related to the improvement.

MeSH terms

  • Cephalometry
  • Cleft Lip* / surgery
  • Cleft Palate* / surgery
  • Humans
  • Maxilla / diagnostic imaging
  • Maxilla / surgery
  • Osteotomy, Le Fort
  • Retrospective Studies