Infant-Driven Feeding Systems: Do They “Normalize” the Feeding Experience of Infants With Cleft Palate?

2021 ◽  
pp. 105566562098435
Author(s):  
Lauren L. Madhoun ◽  
Meghan O’Brien ◽  
Adriane L. Baylis

Objective: To examine feeding skills of infants with cleft palate with or without cleft lip (CP±L) using infant-driven feeding systems compared to healthy controls on standard bottles. Design: Cross-sectional cohort. Setting: Large pediatric academic medical center in the Midwestern United States. Participants: Infants with CP±L (n = 15) using the Dr. Brown’s Specialty Feeding System and typically developing infants without CP±L (n = 15) using the Dr. Brown’s Natural Flow Original or Options bottles. Main Outcome Measure(s): Bottle-feeding proficiency, duration, milk transfer, and signs of feeding difficulty. Results: Five-minute feeding proficiency differed significantly between groups with the control group taking 45% of the feed compared to 16% for the CP±L group on level 1 ( P < .001) and 30% on level 2 ( P < .001) nipples. Proportion of milk transfer was 96% ± 7% for controls and 75% ± 24% for the CP±L group ( P = .013). Feeding duration (minutes) differed between the control group (13 ± 3) and the CP±L groups on each nipple level (level 1: 29 ± 16; P = .003; level 2: 32 ± 11; P = .001). Milk transfer rate (mL/min) was 9 ± 3 for control infants compared to 3 ± 1 for infants with CP±L on level 1 ( P < .001) and 5 ± 1 on level 2 ( P = .007). Coughing occurred in 40% of infants with CP±L and 27% of controls. Conclusions: Even when using specialty bottles, infants with CP±L differ from noncleft infants in feeding proficiency, duration, and overall intake.

2020 ◽  
Vol 56 (2) ◽  
pp. 140
Author(s):  
Asra Al Fauzi ◽  
Christrijogo Sumartono Waloejo ◽  
Abdulloh Machin ◽  
Muhammad Ja'far Shodiq

This research was conducted to evaluate the knowledge and diagnosis of brain death among resident in Indonesia. This study used an observational analytic study with a cross-sectional study design using a questionnaire. The research subjects consisted of 132 level 2 (after 2 years of residency) and level 3 (after 4 years of residency) residents, the total sampling for which was taken from the departments of Neurosurgery, Anesthesiology, and Neurology at Dr. Soetomo Academic Medical Center Hospital, Surabaya, Indonesia. Data were taken from November 2018 to January 2019. A total of 132 residents of Neurosurgery, Neurology, and Anesthesiology participated in this study. From the series of studies, residents’ knowledge of the concept of brain death was in the sufficient category (41.7%), residents’ knowledge of the technical diagnosis of brain death was in the good category (40.2%), residents’ knowledge of brain death examination was in the less category (43.2%), and finally, it was found that the resident's knowledge of brain death was in a good category (35.6%). There were also significant differences in knowledge of brain death between Neurosurgery, Neurology, and Anesthesiologist Resident (P <0.001) and knowledge of brain death between level 2 and level 3 residents (P=0.032). In general, the Indonesian resident doctors’ knowledge of brain death is adequate, but knowledge of the clinical examination of brain death is still lacking. Further research must be carried out to promote knowledge of brain death in residents as well as professional doctors/specialists, so that the number of organ transplants, especially in Indonesia, will increase.


2020 ◽  
pp. 105566562095687
Author(s):  
Lauren L. Madhoun ◽  
Canice E. Crerand ◽  
Meghan O’Brien ◽  
Adriane L. Baylis

Objective: To examine relationships between early feeding and growth and maternal distress in infants with and without cleft lip and/or palate (CL/P). Design: Cross-sectional. Setting: Pediatric academic medical center in the Midwestern United States. Participants: Mothers of infants 1 to 12 weeks old with CL/P (n = 30) and without CL/P (control group, n = 30) were recruited at craniofacial clinic or pediatrician appointments. Main Outcome Measure(s): Maternal responses on the Feeding/Swallowing Impact Survey (FS-IS), Parenting Stress Index, Fourth Edition, Short Form (PSI-4-SF), and Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale. Infant feeding history and growth measurements were obtained. Results: Having an infant with CL/P revealed greater impact on maternal health-related quality of life due to feeding problems ( F = 4.83, P = .03). Mothers of infants with CL/P reported average range Total Stress scores on the PSI-4-SF, which were higher than controls ( F = 4.12, P = .05). Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale scores did not differ between groups. Compared to controls, infants with cleft palate had lower percentiles for weight ( t = 4.13, P = .04) and length ( t = 2.93, P = .01). Higher FS-IS scores were associated with longer feeding duration ( r = 0.32, P = .01) and lower weight ( r = −0.31, P = .02) and length ( r = −0.32, P = .02). Conclusions: Despite receiving early team care and feeding interventions, mothers of infants with CL/P reported higher stress and more challenges with feeding and growth. Future studies should examine targeted psychosocial interventions to improve feeding and growth outcomes in infants with CL/P.


2017 ◽  
Vol 157 (4) ◽  
pp. 676-682 ◽  
Author(s):  
Terence E. Imbery ◽  
Lindsay B. Sobin ◽  
Emily Commesso ◽  
Lindsey Koester ◽  
Sherard A. Tatum ◽  
...  

Objective Describe longitudinal audiometric and otologic outcomes in patients with cleft palates. Study Design Case series with chart review. Setting Single academic medical center. Methods Charts of 564 patients with a diagnosis of cleft palate (59% syndromic etiology, 41% nonsyndromic) from 1998 to 2014 were reviewed. Patients without at least 1 audiometric follow-up were excluded from analysis. Patient demographics, surgeries, audiometric tests, and otologic data were recorded for 352 patients. Results Forty-five percent had isolated cleft palates, 34% had unilateral cleft lip and palate, and 21% had bilateral cleft lip and palate. Patients were followed for a mean of 50.3 months with a mean of 3.2 separate audiograms performed. Patients received a mean of 2.93 pressure equalization tubes. Increased number of pressure equalization tubes was not associated with incidence of cholesteatoma, which was identified in only 4 patients. Nine patients underwent eventual tympanoplasty with an 89% closure rate. Analysis of mean air-bone gap by cleft type did not reveal significant differences ( P = .08), but conductive losses and abnormal tympanometry persisted into teenage years. Conclusions Patients with cleft palates have eustachian tube dysfunction, which, in our cohort, resulted in persistent conductive hearing loss, highlighting the importance of long-term follow-up. Cholesteatoma incidence was low and not associated with number of tubes, which at our institution were placed prophylactically. Tympanoplasty was successful in those with persistent perforations.


2001 ◽  
Vol 38 (4) ◽  
pp. 358-373 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hans Dotevall ◽  
Hasse Ejnell ◽  
Björn Bake

Objectives: (1) To study the nasal airflow patterns during the velopharyngeal closing phase in speech produced by children with and without cleft palate. (2) To compare the nasal airflow patterns in bilabial, dental, and velar articulation in these children. Design: Prospective, cross-sectional study of a consecutive series of children with cleft palate referred for routine speech evaluation and controls. Setting: Sahlgrenska University Hospital, Göteborg, Sweden. Participants: Seventeen children with cleft lip and palate or cleft palate only and 22 controls aged 7 and 10 years. Method: Nasal airflow was transduced with a pneumotachograph attached to a nose mask and registered together with the acoustic speech signal. Sentences containing nasal-to-stop combinations in bilabial, dental, and velar articulatory positions were used. Main Outcomes Measures: The duration from peak to 5% nasal airflow, the maximum flow declination rate, and the nasal airflow at selected points in time during the transition from nasal-to-stop consonants. Results: In the cleft palate group, duration from peak to 5% nasal airflow was clearly longer than among the controls (p < .0001). The declination of airflow was slower (p < .006) and the rate of nasal airflow at the release of the stop consonant was higher (p < .004) in the cleft palate group. Differences between bilabial versus dental and velar articulation were found in the control group. Conclusion: Studies of the temporal and dynamic characteristics of the nasal airflow variations during speech appear potentially useful for the assessment of velopharyngeal function.


2000 ◽  
Vol 37 (2) ◽  
pp. 191-196 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohammad Hossain Rajabian ◽  
Mehdi Sherkat

Objective The objective of this study was to assess the epidemiology and some genetic aspects of oral clefting in Iran. Design The study was a 15-year cross-sectional (prevalence) study from August 1976 to September 1991. Setting The setting for the study was two plastic surgery departments, both mostly referral centers, and a maternity hospital in Iran. Participants The participants were 1669 consecutive surgical cases with oral clefts (79% between 1 day and 18 months of age), registered in two centers. In a parallel study, 19,369 livebirths born in a maternity hospital within the same period were surveyed to ascertain prevalence of clefting at birth. Normal children of this population were used as the control group. Samples were analyzed by prevalence of clefting at birth, type of oral cleft, side of clefting, sex ratio, associated malformations, clefts in relatives, and parental consanguinity. Results The prevalence of clefts was 1.03 per 1000 births. Cleft lip (without cleft palate) had a higher (34.9%) and cleft palate alone had a significantly lower prevalence (17.4%) than expected. Cleft lip (without cleft palate) was more common in females (53.6%) than in males (46.4%). The rate of associated malformations in cleft patients (7.73%) was higher than in controls (0.093%). Association between clefting and consanguinity was significant (45.8% in cases versus 43.1% in controls). Occurrence of noncleft congenital malformations among first-degree relatives of our cases (2.77%) was nearly two times that of controls (1.55%). Conclusion Our study reveals that the population incidence of oral clefts in Iran is much closer to Europian than Arab-African or South East Asian countries. However, significant variations in other epidemiologic and some genetic features were observed.


2020 ◽  
pp. 019459982094489
Author(s):  
David O’Neil Danis ◽  
Kevin Bachrach ◽  
Jacquelyn Piraquive ◽  
Alexander P. Marston ◽  
Jessica R. Levi

Objective Cleft lip and/or cleft palate (CLP) is the most common major congenital malformation of the head and neck. Previous studies suggested an association between fetal opioid exposure and CLP. This study seeks to evaluate the associations between CLP and neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS) in the United States. Study Design Population-based inpatient registry analysis. Setting Academic medical center. Subjects and Methods Kids’ Inpatient Database (2016) was used to identify weighted in-hospital births with diagnoses of CLP or NAS. Demographic information was obtained. Results Among 3.8 million weighted in-hospital births, prevalence rates of CLP in the NAS and non-NAS populations were 3.13 and 1.35 per 1000, respectively. The odds ratios for patients with NAS developing CLP, isolated cleft palate, isolated cleft lip, and cleft lip and palate when compared with the reference population were 2.33 (95% CI, 1.87-2.91; P < .001), 4.97 (95% CI, 3.84-6.43; P < .001), 1.01 ( P = .98), and 0.80 ( P = .46). Independent predictors of CLP within the NAS population included median household income for patients’ zip code, race, hospital region, payment method, and maternal use of tobacco or other drugs of addiction. The binary logistic regression model accounting for possible confounding variables produced an odds ratio of 1.74 (95% CI, 1.36-2.23; P < .001) for the association between NAS and CLP. Conclusion Our study found an association between NAS and CLP, specifically isolated cleft palate, suggesting that prenatal exposure to opioids may be an environmental risk factor in the development of CLP.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Najla Alrejaye ◽  
Jonathan Gao ◽  
Snehlata Oberoi

AbstractIntroductionThe aim of this study was to evaluate three dimensionally the effect of the combined maxillary expansion and protraction treatment on oropharyngeal airway in children with non-syndromic cleft palate with or without cleft lip (CP/L).MethodsCBCT data of 18 preadolescent individuals (ages, 8.4 ± 1.7 years) with CP/L, who underwent Phase I orthodontic maxillary expansion with protraction, were compared before and after treatment. The average length of treatment was 24.1± 7.6 months. The airway volume and minimal cross-sectional area (MCA) were determined using 3DMD Vultus imaging software with cross-sectional areas calculated for each 2-mm over the entire length of the airway. A control group of 9 preadolescent individuals (ages, 8.7 ± 2.6 years) with CP/L was used for comparison.ResultsThere was a statistically significant increase in pharyngeal airway volume after phase I orthodontic treatment in both groups, however, there was no statistically significant change in minimal cross-sectional area in neither study nor control group.ConclusionThe findings showed that maxillary expansion and protraction did not have a significant effect on increasing oropharyngeal volume and MCA in patients with CP/L.


2019 ◽  
pp. 68-73
Author(s):  
Trong Nghia Nguyen ◽  
Thi Nhan Nguyen ◽  
Thi Dua Dao

Background: The metabolic syndrome is a constellation of cardiometabolic risk factors that tend to cluster together in affected individuals more often than predicted by chance. The presence of the metabolic syndrome substantially increases the risk of developing type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease, and is associated with a range of adverse clinical outcomes, many of which are closely associated with aging. Current estimates suggest that approximately 20 - 25% of the world’s population is affected by the metabolic syndrome. The prevalence of the metabolic syndrome rises with age and more than 45% of people aged over 60 years have the metabolic syndrome. Recent studies show that low vitamin D status is very common in the world and this is a risk factor of metabolic syndrome. Objective: (1) Plasma 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentration in subjects with metabolic syndrome. (2) Cut off value of plasma 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentration for predicting metabolic syndrome. Material and method: A cross-sectional study with control group on 318 adult subjects for health examinations at International Medical Center at Hue Central Hospital, including 139 subjects with metabolic syndrome and control group of 179 healthy subjects. Metabolic syndrome was defined according to the IDF, NHLBI, AHA, WHF, IAS, IASO (2009). Plasma hydroxyvitamin D concentration was measured using chemiluminescent microparticle immunoassay. Reciever operating characteristic (ROC) curve were generated to assess sensitivity and specificity for different cut off value of 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentration for predicting metabolic syndrome. Results: Plasma 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentration in subjects with metabolic syndrome was 26.4 ng/ml, incidence of plasma 25-hydroxyvitamin D deficiency (59.7%) was significantly higher than in control group (23.5%) (p < 0.001). The optimal cut off point for 25-OH-D concentration for predictor of metabolic syndrome as 26.4 ng/ml (AUC=0.657, sensitivity=53.4%, specificity=71.6%). Conclusion: In 139 subjects with metabolic syndrome, the plasma 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentration was 26.4 ng/ml and the incidence of 25-hydroxyvitamin D deficiency in the metabolic syndrome group was 59.7%. The optimal cut off point for plasma 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentration for predictor of metabolic syndrome as 26.4 ng/ml. Key words: Metabolic syndrome, 25-hydroxyvitamin D


2021 ◽  
pp. 019459982198960
Author(s):  
Tiffany V. Wang ◽  
Nat Adamian ◽  
Phillip C. Song ◽  
Ramon A. Franco ◽  
Molly N. Huston ◽  
...  

Objectives (1) Demonstrate true vocal fold (TVF) tracking software (AGATI [Automated Glottic Action Tracking by artificial Intelligence]) as a quantitative assessment of unilateral vocal fold paralysis (UVFP) in a large patient cohort. (2) Correlate patient-reported metrics with AGATI measurements of TVF anterior glottic angles, before and after procedural intervention. Study Design Retrospective cohort study. Setting Academic medical center. Methods AGATI was used to analyze videolaryngoscopy from healthy adults (n = 72) and patients with UVFP (n = 70). Minimum, 3rd percentile, 97th percentile, and maximum anterior glottic angles (AGAs) were computed for each patient. In patients with UVFP, patient-reported outcomes (Voice Handicap Index 10, Dyspnea Index, and Eating Assessment Tool 10) were assessed, before and after procedural intervention (injection or medialization laryngoplasty). A receiver operating characteristic curve for the logistic fit of paralysis vs control group was used to determine AGA cutoff values for defining UVFP. Results Mean (SD) 3rd percentile AGA (in degrees) was 2.67 (3.21) in control and 5.64 (5.42) in patients with UVFP ( P < .001); mean (SD) 97th percentile AGA was 57.08 (11.14) in control and 42.59 (12.37) in patients with UVFP ( P < .001). For patients with UVFP who underwent procedural intervention, the mean 97th percentile AGA decreased by 5 degrees from pre- to postprocedure ( P = .026). The difference between the 97th and 3rd percentile AGA predicted UVFP with 77% sensitivity and 92% specificity ( P < .0001). There was no correlation between AGA measurements and patient-reported outcome scores. Conclusions AGATI demonstrated a difference in AGA measurements between paralysis and control patients. AGATI can predict UVFP with 77% sensitivity and 92% specificity.


2021 ◽  
pp. 105566562110132
Author(s):  
Justin Parry Weinfeld ◽  
Jakob Åsberg Johnels ◽  
Christina Persson

Objective: To investigate the prevalence of reading difficulties in children born with cleft palate at ages 9 and 10 in Sweden. Design: Using a cross-sectional design, a parental questionnaire assessing dyslexia-like reading difficulties (Short Dyslexia Scale, SDS) was administered together with separate questions regarding background data. Participants: Families with a child born with overt cleft palate with or without cleft lip in 4 regions of Sweden. A total of 245 families were approached of which 138 families responded. Data from 136 (56%) were complete with information on cleft type and could be analyzed. Results: Twenty-two percent (95% CI, 15-30) of the whole study group displayed risk for dyslexic reading difficulties on the SDS corresponding to the 7th to 10th percentiles in the population. Children with cleft palate only had a significantly higher prevalence of reading difficulties (37%) compared to children with unilateral cleft palate (19%) and bilateral cleft palate (10%). The frequency of reading difficulties in participants with comorbidity was 32%. Among a subgroup with reported comorbidity in areas of attention, language, and learning problems, there was a 2.5 times higher risk of reading disability compared to participants without this reported comorbidity. Conclusion: The prevalence of reading difficulties in the cleft palate population was higher than in the general population. Results showed that co-occurring difficulties were common in the cleft group and that reading difficulties often appear together with other, co-occurring neurodevelopmental difficulties.


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