Abstract

In patients with clefts, the affection of other congenital malformations on the feeding is unclear. We investigated the other congenital malformations and nutritional intake of neonates with cleft lip and/or palate and examined their relationships associated with cleft type and laterality. The participants included 126 infants under treatment with a presurgical naso-alveolar molding (PNAM) or a Hotz-type plate. The survey items were gender, cleft type and side, presence and nature of other congenital malformations, birth weight and nutritional method at age of the fifth day. The number of infants was 36 (28.6%) of cleft lip and alveolus, 82 (65.1%) of cleft lip and palate, and 8 (6.3%) of cleft palate only. Forty-three patients (34.1%) had other various congenital malformations. The nutritional method included oral intake in 78.6% (n=99) of cases and tube feeding with/without oral intake in 21.4% (n=27) of cases. The rate of tube feeding was higher for right-sided clefts than that for left-sided clefts. This observation was consistent with the fact that right-sided clefts were associated with more significant other congenital malformations than those on the left-side. The nutritional method for infants with cleft lip and/or palate was related to the presence of other congenital malformations, not to cleft laterality or oral cleft itself under early treatment with PNAM plate. These results proposed that screening the general condition is essential for neonates with right-sided cleft lip with/without cleft palate compared to left-sided clefts, which should be conducted immediately after birth for planning the appropriate nutritional method.

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