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Cleft Lip and Palate

Samuel Berkowitz (eds.)

2nd Edition.

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial

No disponible.

Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial

Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery; Plastic Surgery; Dentistry

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada 2006 SpringerLink

Información

Tipo de recurso:

libros

ISBN impreso

978-3-540-23409-8

ISBN electrónico

978-3-540-30020-5

Editor responsable

Springer Nature

País de edición

Reino Unido

Fecha de publicación

Información sobre derechos de publicación

© Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2006

Cobertura temática

Tabla de contenidos

Developmental Biology and Morphogenesis of the Face, Lip and Palate

Alphonse R. Burdi

The understanding of the natural history, clinical delineation, and clinical management of birth defects involving the face, lip, and palate has progressed significantly over the last 20 years and continues to do as we move further into the 21st century. Although human craniofacial morphogenesis is clearly the culmination of a very complex series of diverse and overlapping developmental events, all of these events can be categorized into four fundamental processes which span mammalian development and are evident in the earliest beginnings of the face and palate - normal and abnormal: (1) cell differentiation - the process through which the myriad of “building block” cell types invoked in facial morphogenesis are generated from the single-celled zygote; (2) morphogenesis - the process or set of processes through which the complex form of the face and its constituent cells, tissues, and organs will emerge in a timely fashion along patternable individual and population lines; (3) growth - the collective results of differentiation and morphogenesis; and (4) dysmorphogenesis and abnormal growth - this is the most exciting of the challenges we face today as we strive to understand how environmental influences interact with and cause changes in the expression of the genetic factors governing the behavior of those cells which will give rise to the entire human body, and especially the face and palatal regions. The treatment of defective genes is very much a part of the current clinical agenda dealing with craniofacial defects. The basic scientist, the dysmorphologist, the clinician, and, importantly, those with natural or acquired craniofacial defects have gained significant advantage from the critical use of available information coming from classical and experimental studies of human morphogenesis. These advantages will continue to increase as laboratory scientists and clinician scholars move rapidly together into the world of molecular and gene biology. These approaches should and will increase our knowledge base on the patterns and underlying causes of normal and abnormal craniofacial morphogenesis - and our patients will be all the better for it. However, most researchers and treatment providers well realize that the practical transfer of new biological information on normal and abnormal development flowing from the laboratory bench to the clinical bedside may be neither easy nor timely to achieve in the effective treatment and management of craniofacial abnormalities.

Palabras clave: Neural Crest Cell; Crest Cell; Cleft Palate; Pharyngeal Arch; Palatal Shelf.

Section I - Facial Embryology and Neonatal Palatal Cleft Morphology | Pp. 3-12

Prenatal Diagnosis of Oral Clefts

Jorge L. Gomez

Palabras clave: Prenatal Diagnosis; Cleft Palate; Oral Cleft; Facial Cleft; Ultrasound Obstet Gynecol.

Section I - Facial Embryology and Neonatal Palatal Cleft Morphology | Pp. 13-15

The Value of Longitudinal Facial and Dental Casts Records in Clinical Research and Treatment Analysis

Samuel Berkowitz

Section I - Facial Embryology and Neonatal Palatal Cleft Morphology | Pp. 17-22

Facial and Palatal Growth

Samuel Berkowitz

Palabras clave: Cleft Palate; Nasal Septum; Facial Growth; Cranial Base; Mandibular Growth.

Section I - Facial Embryology and Neonatal Palatal Cleft Morphology | Pp. 23-34

Alternative Method Used to Correct Distorted Neonatal Cleft Arch Forms

Samuel Berkowitz

Palabras clave: Cleft Palate; Bilateral Cleft; Orthopedic Appliance; Soft Palate Closure; Primary Bone Grafting.

Section I - Facial Embryology and Neonatal Palatal Cleft Morphology | Pp. 35-40

The Effect of Clefting of the Lip and Palate an the Palatal Arch Form

Samuel Berkowitz

Palabras clave: Soft Palate; Cleft Palate; Hard Palate; Alveolar Process; Alveolar Cleft.

Section II - Types of Clefts | Pp. 43-54

Clefts of the Lip and Alveolus and Clefts of the Uvulae and Soft Palate

Samuel Berkowitz

Palabras clave: Soft Palate; Anterior Cranial Basis; Alveolar Bone Graft; Alveolar Segment; Alveolar Portion.

Section II - Types of Clefts | Pp. 55-60

Complete Unilateral Cleft of the Lip and Palate

Samuel Berkowitz

Palabras clave: Cleft Palate; Lateral Incisor; Arch Form; Gonial Angle; Alveolar Segment.

Section II - Types of Clefts | Pp. 61-98

Complete Bilateral Cleft Lip and Palate

Samuel Berkowitz

Palabras clave: Palatal Cleft; Lateral Incisor; Mixed Dentition; Anterior Open Bite; Anterior Cranial Base.

Section II - Types of Clefts | Pp. 99-191

Isolated Cleft Palate

Samuel Berkowitz

Section II - Types of Clefts | Pp. 193-198