Importance of Stem Cell Transplantation in Cleft Lip and Palate Surgical Treatment Protocol

Cleft lip and palate is a congenital malformation that requires a multidisciplinary treatment that evolves pediatrician, obstetrics, fetal medicine, genetics, plastic surgery, orthodontics, speech therapist, nursery, and psychology. Actually, the authors believe that it could be possible to ad protocols to use stem cells. The intrauterine diagnosis leads to preborn parental orientation and better parental collaboration to accept a precocious multidisciplinary treatment. After birth the authors’ protocol is: orthodontic devices, phonoaudiology, and surgical procedures. The authors’ cleft lip and palate reconstructive surgery protocol demands several steps and begins at 4 to 6-month old with rhinocheiloplasty and soft palate closure at the same moment. The treatment sequence involves the hard palate surgery (8–18 months after the first surgical step), alveoloplasty (after 10 years old), and secondary rhinoplasty (after 14 years old). New ideas to use stem cells and blood from the umbilical cord and also blood from placenta are discussed to improve final surgical results. Maternal stem cells are easy to collect, there are no damage to the patient and mother, it is autologous and it could be very useful in the authors’ protocol. Nine patients with clef lip and palate were operated and had stem cells from umbilical cord blood and placenta blood injected into the bone and soft tissue during the primary procedure (rhinocheiloplasty). The stem cells activity into soft ti...
Source: Journal of Craniofacial Surgery - Category: Surgery Tags: Original Articles Source Type: research