Classification of cleft lip and cleft palate

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Cleft lip and clip palate is an "umbrella term" for a heterogeneous collection of orofacial clefts. It includes clefting of the upper lip, the maxillary alveolus (dental arch), and the hard or soft palate, in various combinations. The anatomic combinations include:[1]


  • cleft lip [CL]
  • cleft lip and alveolus [CLA]
  • cleft lip, alveolus, and palate [CLAP]
  • cleft lip and palate (with an intact alveolus) [CLP]
  • cleft palate [CP]

Embryologically, the upper lip may become clefted in the center (a median cleft lip) or on one or both sides (a paramedian cleft lip). The paramedian form is more common, and the median cleft lip is exceedingly rare. Most classification schemes consider only paramedian cleft lip to fall under the CL/P grouping, although this has been the subject of some controversy. (Many consider the median cleft lip to be better grouped under the Tessier classification for atypical orofacial clefts, with median cleft lip representing a Tessier 0 cleft.) The typical paramedian cleft lip may affect one side (unilateral) or both sides (bilateral). A unilateral cleft lip is much more common.

Clefting of the maxillary alveolus tends to accompany the cleft of the lip, and thus may affect the center (with a median cleft lip) or one or both sides (in unilateral or bilateral paramedian cleft lip, respectively).

Cleft palate does not have laterality in the same sense that the cleft lip does. Rather, there are certain morphologic forms of cleft palate (described succinctly by the Veau classification, as explained in detail below). An isolated cleft of the palate (whether Veau-I soft palate only or Veau-II hard and soft palate) is a "midline" cleft. A Veau-III cleft may be considered "unilateral," as it is contiguous with a unilateral cleft lip. A Veau-IV cleft may be considered "midline" or "bilateral" as it is contiguous with a bilateral cleft lip. Due to the confusion regarding laterality of the palate, usage of the terms "midline," "unilateral," and "bilateral" should be discouraged in favor of more accurate morphologic descriptions.

Severity of cleft lip

The clefting of the lip may be complete, incomplete, or lesser-form, with the lesser-form clefts being further subdivided into minor-form, microform, and mini-microform. A bilateral cleft lip may feature the same degree of clefting on each side (and thus be symmetric bilateral cleft lip) or may differ from side-to-side (asymmetric bilateral cleft lip). The severity of the cleft lip informs the choice for operative repair.

Morphology of cleft palate

Notation

References

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