Cleft lip / Cleft palate
Introduction to the disorder
When the upper lip and top of the mouth do not join successfully early in the pregnancy, a strange condition known as cleft lip/palate is said to have occurred. The lip and palate grow independently, so it is feasible for an infant to be conceived with just a cleft lip, or just a cleft palate, or a blend of both. When there is a gap or opening reaching out from the lip as far as up as the nose then it is a complete cleft lip. In some cases, some tissue stays underneath the nose, leaving a piece of the lip joined beneath the nose - this is referred to as an incomplete cleft lip. The roof of the mouth is comprised of two principle parts - a bony segment called the hard palate and a soft tissue / muscular part known as the soft palate. The separation of the lip can be on the soft palate only or on both. When it does occur on both parts of the body it is known as bilateral cleft, while if occurs only on one of the two it is called a unilateral cleft (Royal Children's Hospital, 2010).
CLP occurrence cuts across a wide range of medical conditions that involve teratogenicity or Mendelian syndromes. In the past, there has been some positive advancement in identifying the nature of the environment that accelerates the development of CLP; however, the larger part of what characterizes this condition is yet to be isolated. CLP etiological nature is heterogeneous making it crucial to come up with accurate studies for both genetic environment characteristics that led to this condition. It is through this heterogeneity that various mutations have been identified through genomics (Dixon, Marazita, Beaty & Murray, 2011).
Orthodontic view of CLP aspect creates a picture that this condition is extremely severe because the location of the cleft segments makes the process of surgical exploration difficult without causing oronasal fistula. The immediate effect of development of CLP is defects in the feeding mechanism and speech. It therefore becomes necessary to develop surgical criteria to help children with cleft palate and lip (Nyberg, Peterson & Lohmander, 2014). This means that there should be intensive research to come up with perfect medical strategies to address the condition of children with this condition before the medical state becomes challenging to reverse.
Cleft lips and palates are some of the most broadly known innate orofacial irregularities. They happen in roughly 700 babies conceived daily somewhere on earth, and the numbers are always on the rise. Its origin has not been fully fathomed notwithstanding the way that the heredity assumes a pivotal part in its occurrence. Clefts are acquired in a semi-perpetual hereditary model with a unique expressiveness. Cleft palate happens in around one in 700 live births around the world. It is imagined that an expansive crevice in kids with this sort of cleft results in problem of building so much negative pressure within the mouth due to the presence of a huge oro-nasal contact (Radojicic, Tanic, Jovic, Cutovic & Papadopoulos, 2014). Such a contact hinders the usual blood circulation.
Cleft lip/palate and infancy
When the baby is breastfeeding and milk goes into the uncovered upper respiratory routes, this may bring about exceptionally disturbing circumstances such as inhaling inordinate amounts of air, gulping excessive milk, and nasal expulsion, after which gagging, coughing, vomiting, choking and possibly cyanosis might occur. Those children, regardless of whether they are just halfway breastfed, are constantly drained and languid. All that can adversely affect their development. The parents' anxiety when nursing their infants and also their expanded strain and stress on account of their babies' deficient milk intake ought not to be disregarded since it has real outcomes such as the child's not picking up weight. The baby-mother relationship shifts as well (Radojicic et al., 2014). This relationship and its growth is a very important aspect for the development of speech and language characteristics in the child who is suffering from cleft lip and palate issues. In the next section, we will thus discuss the general speech and language characteristics as well as the effect that having a cleft lip or palate has on its development.
Speech-language characteristics
As aforementioned, the speech and language development is an important part for the child suffering from a cleft lip or palate. Hence, the roof of the mouth is crucial in spoken discourse or speech. In the closed position the palate ordinarily shuts firmly against the throat on the side as well as the back of the throat in order to disect...
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