TY - JOUR
T1 - Original article classification of congenital midline upper lip sinuses
T2 - A case report and review of the literature
AU - Aoki, Marie
AU - Sakamoto, Yoshiaki
AU - Nagasao, Tomohisa
AU - Miyamoto, Junpei
AU - Kishi, Kazuo
PY - 2014/3
Y1 - 2014/3
N2 - Background: We recently encountered a case of a midline upper lip sinus, one of the rarest congenital lip sinuses. Several embryological hypotheses have been proposed regarding the etiology of this rare disease, but it remains obscure. Methods: We reviewed all cases of upper lip sinus reported in the English language through 2011, and classified them into three types according to accompanying anomalies and the site of the fistula. Results: Twenty-eight studies involving 31 cases were reviewed and classified. A type I sinus was a midline sinus without accompanying anomalies. There were 13 such cases, with a female predilection. Type II sinuses were midline sinuses with accompanying anomalies, and there were nine such cases. Type III sinuses were lateral sinuses with or without accompanying anomalies; there were nine cases. Conclusions: Our classification scheme is not only convenient for clinical application, but also reflects the embryological process responsible for congenital lip sinuses.
AB - Background: We recently encountered a case of a midline upper lip sinus, one of the rarest congenital lip sinuses. Several embryological hypotheses have been proposed regarding the etiology of this rare disease, but it remains obscure. Methods: We reviewed all cases of upper lip sinus reported in the English language through 2011, and classified them into three types according to accompanying anomalies and the site of the fistula. Results: Twenty-eight studies involving 31 cases were reviewed and classified. A type I sinus was a midline sinus without accompanying anomalies. There were 13 such cases, with a female predilection. Type II sinuses were midline sinuses with accompanying anomalies, and there were nine such cases. Type III sinuses were lateral sinuses with or without accompanying anomalies; there were nine cases. Conclusions: Our classification scheme is not only convenient for clinical application, but also reflects the embryological process responsible for congenital lip sinuses.
KW - Congenital sinus
KW - Midline sinus
KW - Upper lip fistula
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U2 - 10.1597/12-046R
DO - 10.1597/12-046R
M3 - Article
C2 - 22849592
AN - SCOPUS:84896775526
SN - 1055-6656
VL - 51
SP - 154
EP - 157
JO - Cleft Palate-Craniofacial Journal
JF - Cleft Palate-Craniofacial Journal
IS - 2
ER -