Abstract

As patients grow older, the unilateral cleft lip nasal deformity becomes more noticeable than the repaired lip. The authors assessed nasal revisions over 20 years of the senior author's management of unilateral complete cleft lip. One hundred patients who underwent primary two-stage nasolabial correction of unilateral complete cleft lip between 1991 and 2001 were reviewed. The median patient age was 21 years at the time of analysis. Only 13 percent of patients did not require nasal revision after primary nasolabial repair. One to two nasal revisions were undertaken in 65 percent of patients. The extent of nasal maneuvers during primary labial repair was associated with the number of revisions. Recently treated patients had fewer revisions. Female patients were more likely to undergo several revisions. Of patients who had semiopen suspension sutures at primary repair, 61 percent had this maneuver repeated two or more times. In contrast, patients who had closed suspension sutures at primary repair underwent more nasal revisions and later required more nasal maneuvers. Nasal revision before skeletal maturity was significantly associated with another nasal revision after completion of skeletal growth. Twenty-seven percent of patients eventually required an aesthetic or functional rhinoplasty in adulthood. Patients with a severe initial nasal deformity require multiple revisions. Semiopen suspension sutures are associated with fewer revisions. Revision of the nasal cartilages or alar base can often be performed in the intermediate phase, in combination with other operations. Therapeutic, IV.

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