40 4 
Home Page  

  • SciELO

  • Google
  • SciELO
  • Google


Nutrición Hospitalaria

 ISSN 1699-5198 ISSN 0212-1611

GALLEGO, Rocío et al. Growth trajectories in children with cleft lip and/or palate. []. , 40, 4, pp.717-723.   20--2023. ISSN 1699-5198.  https://dx.doi.org/10.20960/nh.04620.

Introduction:

the nutritional status and growth of children with cleft lip and/or palate (CL/P) can be affected due to feeding difficulties caused by their anatomy and the surgical interventions.

Objective:

this retrospective longitudinal study aims to analyse the growth trajectories of a cohort of children with CL/P and compare them with a healthy representative cohort of children from Aragon (Spain).

Methods:

type of cleft, surgical technique and sequelae, and weight, length/height and body mass index (BMI) (weight/height2) at different ages (0-6 years) were recorded. Normalized age- and sex-specific anthropometric Z-scores values were calculated by World Health Organization (WHO) charts.

Results:

forty-one patients (21 male, 20 female) were finally included: 9.75 % cleft lip (n = 4/41), 41.46 % cleft palate (n = 17/41) and 48.78 % cleft lip and palate (n = 20/41). The worst nutritional status Z-scores were achieved at the age of three months (44.44 % and 50 % had a weight and a BMI lower than -1 Z-score, respectively). Mean weight and BMI Z-scores were both significantly lower than controls at one, three and six months of age, recovering from that moment until the age of one year.

Conclusions:

the highest nutritional risk in CL/P patients takes place at 3-6 months of age, but nutritional status and growth trajectories get recovered from one year of age compared to their counterparts. Nevertheless, the rate of thin subjects among CL/P patients is higher during childhood.

: Cleft lip; Cleft palate; Growth; Nutrition.

        · |     · |     · ( pdf )