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Etiological Study of Persistent Velopharyngeal Insufficiency in Children With Operated Velopalatine Cleft by Analysis of Velopharyngeal Motor Skills in Static and Dynamic MRI

Etiological Study of Persistent Velopharyngeal Insufficiency in Children With Operated Velopalatine Cleft by Analysis of Velopharyngeal Motor Skills in Static and Dynamic MRI

Recruiting
7-12 years
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

Velopharyngeal insufficiency is defined as the inability of the soft palate to isolate the nasopharynx from the oropharynx. It is a frequent sequela in patients with a velopalatine cleft despite anatomical restoration of the soft palate by intravelar veloplasty at 6 months. If rehabilitation by a speech therapist is not successful, a pharyngoplasty can be discussed. In the last ten years, MRI was used in dynamic and static way, to analyzed velopharyngeal muscles, in particular Levator Veli Palatini. MRI could be used to identify the etiology of VPI in those patients, and thus allow personalized rehabilitation and surgical management. The aim of this study is to examine the differences in velopharyngeal motricity as well as velar muscles morphology, positioning, and symmetry of children with repaired cleft palate with different degrees of severity of velopharyngeal insufficiency (VPI), and children with labial cleft (noncleft palate anatomy).

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Children aged 7 to 12 years with Isolated cleft lip
  • isolated velopalatal cleft
  • Without a diagnosis of syndromic cleft or Pierre Robin sequence
  • French speaking, and French is the native language
  • Operated with a cheiloplasty (for cleft lip) or an intravelar Veloplasty (according to Sommerlad) at the Amiens University Hospital
  • Whose follow-up is done at the Amiens University Hospital

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Refusal of the parents and/or the patient
  • With a contraindication to MRI
  • Whose follow-up was initiated in another center and/or whose surgery was performed in another center
  • Whose surgical schedule has not been followed
  • Patient with severe neurological or neuropsychiatric disorders or Severe speech and language delay not related to the cleft anatomy
  • Patients treated with fixed, non-removable orthodontic treatment.

Study details
    Velopharyngeal Insufficiency
    Real Time MRI
    Cleft Palate

NCT06072495

Centre Hospitalier Universitaire, Amiens

27 January 2024

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