Use of Computer Aided Design and 3D Printing for Anesthesiology Management in a Pediatric Patient With Cleft Facial Defect

Status: Recruiting
Intervention Type: Device
Study Type: Interventional
Study Phase: Not Applicable
SUMMARY

Congenital malformations of the orofacial area are the most common congenital malformations in children with an incidence of 1.8 children with orofacial cleft per 1000 healthy births in the Czech Republic. The care of children with cleft facial defects is multidisciplinary, centralized and takes place from birth to adulthood. At the University Hospital Brno, the treatment for patients with orofacial cleft is provided by the Cleft Center (CC) of the University Hospital Brno. The main specialties that form the basis of CC include plastic surgery, pediatric anesthesiology and neonatology. Patients with facial cleft defects are divided into 2 main groups based on the embryological causes of clefts: 1/ patients with cleft lip, jaw with or without cleft palate (total cleft) and 2/ patients with isolated cleft soft and hard palate. Anesthesia in children with orofacial clefts is specific not only to the age of the patients, but mainly to the cleft itself. Anesthesiology management, and especially intubation of these patients, are often difficult due to the nature of the defect with high incidence of complications such as difficult airway, desaturation, laryngospasm or bradycardia. In addition, tissue damage including soft tissue of the lip, alveolar arch, palate and nasal septum as well as skeleton of the premaxilla and nasal septum during intubation is seen in approximately 90% of patients. To facilitate intubation, improve anesthesiology management and safety of pediatric patients with orofacial cleft, we will develop an individualized protective tray from a silicone material, that will be used during intubation to cover the defect of the alveolar arch and palate. A mold for casting of a protective tray, will be created on a 3D printer on bases of 3D scan. Use of the protective tray would facilitate intubation, decrease anesthesiologic complications and protect soft and hard tissues of the cleft palate and upper jaw during intubation.

Eligibility
Participation Requirements
Sex: All
Maximum Age: 2
Healthy Volunteers: f
View:

• Pediatric patients with unilateral or bilateral cleft lip and alveolus (U/BCLA) or unilateral or bilateral cleft lip, alveolus and palate (total cleft; U/BCLAP) who underwent primary lip reconstruction within 0-3 months of age (most often at our workplace in the neonatal period)

• Pediatric patients with isolated cleft palate (ICP) and patients with unilateral or bilateral cleft lip, alveolus and palate (U/BCLAP) who underwent primary cleft reconstruction between 6 and 18 months of age.

Contact Information
Primary
Michaela Richtorvá, MD.
richtrova.michaela@fnbrno.cz
532234693
Backup
Olga Košková, MD., Ph.D.
koskova.olga@fnbrno.cz
532234790
Time Frame
Start Date: 2021-08-01
Estimated Completion Date: 2026-12-31
Participants
Target number of participants: 120
Treatments
Experimental: intervention group (3D protective obturator)
Patients enrolled in the intervention group will have an intraoral scan of the palate, alveolar arch, and upper vestibular area before surgery. Based on this 3D visualization of precise anatomical conditions in the oral cavity, a form (negative unique impression of the upper jaw and palato-alveolar conditions) for casting of a protective obturator (splint), used during intubation to cover the defect of the alveolar arch and palate will be created on a 3D printer, in cooperation with the Faculty of Mechanical Engineering (Department of Mechanics of Bodies, Mechatronics and Biomechanics) of Brno University of Technology. For the production of the obturator, a silicone certified for use in the oral cavity will be used.
No_intervention: control group
The standard procedure without the 3D obturator.
Related Therapeutic Areas
Sponsors
Collaborators: Masaryk University, Brno University of Technology
Leads: Brno University Hospital

This content was sourced from clinicaltrials.gov