Orthodontics

Text supplied by: Heather Keall, Orthodontist Middlemore Hospital and Peter Fowler, Orthodontist Christchurch Hospital.

The vast majority of children born with a cleft (either lip and/or palate) will need some form of orthodontic treatment. Most will need to wear braces in their teenage years.

Orthodontics is the specialty in dentistry concerned with the growth and development of the jaws, straightening of teeth and correction of the way that teeth fit together.

Regular Visit

The child is seen at regular intervals at the cleft clinic and the dental development is monitored. Children should be enrolled at the school dental clinic at age 1 for routine dental check-ups and treatment if necessary for tooth decay or with a private family dentist or a private paediatric specialist dentist. (Note: treatment with a private dentist is not free). This allows an optimal preventive program to be tailored to your child’s needs. The management of some of the dental problems associated with cleft lip and palate (eg extra teeth or malformed teeth in the line of the cleft) may be best carried out by a dentist. It is important that you as parents take good care of your child’s teeth through regular brushing from an early age, and by keeping sweet foods and drinks to a minimum.

  • Bone Grafts

    Some children with clefts require a bone graft to the gum area where the cleft was repaired in order to have a chance of developing a full arch of healthy teeth. This involves a course of orthodontic treatment and begins when the upper eye tooth begins to develop a root – somewhere between 8 and 11 years. The orthodontic treatment is followed by graft surgery.

  • Braces

    Most children with clefts require some orthodontic treatment to straighten their teeth. Braces are usually placed when all permanent teeth are present at approximately 12 years of age. Orthodontic treatment usually takes about two years with adjustments needed every four to eight weeks (about the same as their friends without clefts).

  • Jaw Alignment

    Some young people with clefts have significant growth discrepancy between the upper and lower jaws and it becomes apparent at adolescence or sooner that the lower jaw is larger than the upper. Usually these people have orthodontic treatment later in their teenage years when growth is nearing completion. The oral and maxillofacial surgeon adjusts the bone of the jaws so that normal bite is achieved.

  • Summary of Orthodontic Treatment

    1. Early treatment with a plate before lip surgery.

    2. A course of brace treatment before bone graft to gum between 8 and 11 years.

    3. Orthodontic treatment with braces for 2 years at about 12 years.

    4. Some people have later brace treatment and jaw adjustment surgery by an oral and maxillofacial surgeon when they are fully grown