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We all start out life with a cleft lip and palate. During normal
fetal development between the 6th and 11th week of pregnancy,
the clefts in the lip and palate fuse together. In babies born
with cleft lip or cleft palate, one or both of these splits
failed to fuse.
A “cleft” means a split or separation; the palate is the “roof”
of the mouth. A cleft palate or lip then is a split in the oral
(mouth) structure. Physicians call clefting a “craniofacial
anomaly.” A child can be born with both a cleft lip and cleft
palate or a cleft in just one area. Oral clefts are one of the
most common birth defects.
Clefts in the lip can range from a tiny notch in the upper lip
to a split that extends into the nose. A cleft palate can range
from a small malformation that results in minimal problems to a
large separation of the palate that interferes with eating,
speaking, and even breathing. Clefts are often referred to as
unilateral, a split on one side, or bilateral, one split on each
side. There are three primary types of clefts:
1.
Cleft
lip/palate
refers to the condition when both the palate and lip are cleft.
About one in 1,000 babies are born with cleft lip/palate.
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About 50 percent of all clefts
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More common in Asians and certain groups of American Indians
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Occurs less frequently in African Americans
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Up to 13 percent of cases present with other birth defects
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Occurs more often in male children
2.
Isolated cleft palate is the term used when a
cleft occurs only in the palate. About one in 2,000 babies are
born with this type of cleft (the incidence of submucous cleft
palate, a type of isolated cleft palate, is one in 1,200).
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About 30 percent of all clefts
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All racial groups have similar risk
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Occurs more often in female children
3.
Isolated cleft lip refers to a cleft in the lip
only accounting for 20 percent of all clefts.
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