Abstract
The length of the cervical spine in a series of 206 adult males with cleft lip and/or palate and 50 normal controls was measured. The patients were divided into five subgroups according to the type and extent of the cleft. The shortening of the spine was most marked in bilateral cleft lip and palate patients (complete), less marked in unilateral cleft lip and palate patients, and was slight in isolated cleft palate patients. Complete isolated cleft palate and cleft lip was not associated with a shortening of the spine. A shortening of the cervical spine in less extensive types of isolated cleft palate was suggestive of the participation of the spine in their development, while in cleft lip and palate a simultaneous exposure to a teratogenic agent or any other developmental error during early stages of embryogenesis could explain the concomitant occurrence of spine anomalies. Patients with cleft lip and palate associated with a short spine also had a shorter mandibular ramus, which could be suggestive of simultaneous damage to both structures during morphogenesis. This relationship was not demonstrated in isolated cleft palate that developed in later stages of embryogenesis. In these cases a short spine itself could not have impaired the growth potential of the mandible, yet it could have mechanically induced the development of cleft palate. These observations are in agreement with the present state of knowledge on the development of orofacial clefts as shown in experimental animals.
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