Background: This study aims to assess the improvement of sleep apnea after secondary Le Fort III facial advancement with distraction (LF3) in faciocraniosynostosis (FCS) patients with sleep apnea who have previously undergone fronto-facial monobloc advancement (FFMBA) with distraction.
Methods: Patients having undergone secondary LF3 were selected from a cohort of FCS patients with documented sleep apnea who had previously undergone fronto-facial monobloc advancement. Patient charts and polysomnographic records were reviewed.
Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA) in children, which has a multifactorial origin, can lead, if not treated, to severe medical complications, growth disturbances, behavioural changes and reduced quality of life. Nowadays, it is underdiagnosed whereas early screening, diagnosis and interdisciplinary treatment are essential. Furthermore, many families and health professionals do not often know where to go when there is suspicion of OSA for a child.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObstructive sleep apnea syndrome is prevalent in children with syndromic craniosynostoses. Here we assessed the effects of fronto-facial monobloc advancement with internal distraction on obstructive sleep apnea in syndromic craniosynostoses. All patients managed for syndromic craniosynostosis over a period of 14 years were assessed based on apnea-hyponea index (AHI) before and after fronto-facial surgery.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUpper airway stenosis in patients with faciocraniosynostosis is very common and often severe. Mid-face advancement, either with a Le Fort III or concomitantly to a monobloc frontofacial advancement, may prevent a tracheotomy or result in its ablation. The amelioration of respiratory function appears to be much better if the mid-face advancement is combined with distraction osteogenesis, although large studies with long-term follow-up are rare.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUpper airway stenosis in patients with faciocraniosynostosis is very common and often severe. Midface advancement, either with a Le Fort III or concomitantly to a monobloc frontofacial advancement, may prevent a tracheotomy or result in its ablation. The amelioration of respiratory function appears to be much better if the midface advancement is combined with distraction osteogenesis, although large studies with long-term follow-up are rare.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: Pierre Robin sequence (posterior U-shape cleft palate, glossoptosis, retrognathia) (PRS) is a frequent and heterogeneous neonatal condition of obscure origin. We show here that orodigestive and cardiorespiratory functional disorders are very frequent in PRS and that these functional disorders, as well as anatomical and embryological data, argue for the involvement of brainstem dysfunction in the pathogenesis of some cases of isolated PRS. A total of 66 infants consecutively admitted for isolated PRS were followed-up with observations and investigations focused on their orodigestive and cardiorespiratory disorders.
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