From the Section of Plastic Surgery, Department of Surgery, and the Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Michigan Medicine; and the University of Michigan Medical School.
Plast Reconstr Surg. 2019 Jul;144(1):171-178. doi: 10.1097/PRS.0000000000005722.
Although revision surgery is part of the reconstructive process for children with cleft lip and/or cleft palate, the indications for revision vary, and the extent to which surgeons and families agree on appearance is unclear. The authors sought to understand the extent to which children with cleft lip and/or cleft palate, surgeons, caregivers, and control observers agree on satisfaction with appearance and the desire for revision.
Children with cleft lip and/or cleft palate (n = 100) and their caregivers (n = 100) were surveyed regarding satisfaction with appearance using the Cleft Evaluation Profile. Surgeons (n = 10) and control observers (n = 10) rated photographs of these children using questions analogous to the Cleft Evaluation Profile. General linear model repeated measures analysis of variance were used to detect significant differences between raters, with an alpha of 0.05.
The children reported greater satisfaction with appearance across all domains compared with surgeons (nose, 7.77 versus 5.51, p < 0.001; lip, 7.94 versus 5.90, p < 0.001; maxilla, 8.16 versus 6.56, p < 0.001) and general observers (nose, 7.78 versus 6.00, p < 0.001; lip, 7.80 versus 6.12, p < 0.001; maxilla, 8.16 versus 7.40, p < 0.001). Children and caregivers expressed similar degrees of satisfaction with appearance of the lip (5.48 ± 1.69 versus 5.6 ± 1.49, p > 0.5) and maxilla (6.08 ± 1.1 versus 5.8 ± 1.2, p = 0.07). There was no significant relationship between children and surgeons in terms of the desire for revision surgery (p = 0.44).
All groups expressed differing levels of satisfaction with cleft-specific aspects of appearance. Importantly, children were more satisfied than all other groups. Care must be taken to evaluate perceptions of all stakeholders before moving forward with cleft revision surgery.
尽管修复手术是儿童唇裂和/或腭裂重建过程的一部分,但修复手术的适应证存在差异,并且外科医生和家庭在对外貌的满意度上的看法尚不清楚。作者试图了解唇裂和/或腭裂儿童、外科医生、照顾者和对照组观察者在对外貌的满意度和对修复的渴望方面达成一致的程度。
使用腭裂评估量表对 100 名唇裂和/或腭裂儿童及其照顾者进行了对外貌满意度的调查。10 名外科医生(n=10)和 10 名对照组观察者(n=10)使用类似于腭裂评估量表的问题对这些儿童的照片进行了评分。使用重复测量方差分析的广义线性模型来检测评分者之间的显著差异,显著性水平为 0.05。
与外科医生(鼻子,7.77 对 5.51,p<0.001;嘴唇,7.94 对 5.90,p<0.001;上颌骨,8.16 对 6.56,p<0.001)和对照组观察者(鼻子,7.78 对 6.00,p<0.001;嘴唇,7.80 对 6.12,p<0.001;上颌骨,8.16 对 7.40,p<0.001)相比,儿童对所有领域的外貌满意度更高。儿童和照顾者对嘴唇(5.48±1.69 对 5.6±1.49,p>0.5)和上颌骨(6.08±1.1 对 5.8±1.2,p=0.07)的外貌满意度相似。在对外修复手术的渴望方面,儿童与外科医生之间没有显著关系(p=0.44)。
所有组都对特定于唇裂的外貌方面表达了不同程度的满意度。重要的是,儿童比所有其他群体更满意。在进行唇裂修复手术之前,必须仔细评估所有利益相关者的看法。