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Hi, my name is Cate Crowley. I am a professor of practice here at Teachers College, Columbia University in New York City.
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Welcome to the Cleft Palate Speech and Feeding Video Tutorials that I've created with my co-authors, Dr. Miriam Baigorri and Ms. Chelsea Sommer.
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We've created these video tutorials for children who are born with cleft palates,
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but who may not have a speech therapist or speech pathologist available to address their speech issues.
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In addition, we've created them for those speech language therapists and speech pathologists
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who may want to acquire an understanding of how to work with children born with cleft palate.
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And finally, we especially want to thank the families and children who worked in our Advanced Cleft Palate Research Clinic here at Teachers College, Columbia University
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to provide the videos that you're going to see throughout these video modules,
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seeing how we do speech therapy with these children born with cleft palate.
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Thank you so much. I hope you enjoy them!
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To begin our modules, I want to share with you our very first therapy session with Peyton and her mom, both of whom are featured throughout these video modules.
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Peyton was born with a cleft palate and recently had surgery for speech at five years old, and had just been cleared for speech therapy.
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This short video demonstrates the important role the speech-language pathologist or therapist can have in the lives of children born with cleft palates.
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Say: "p, p, p"
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"p, p, p"
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Say: "b"
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"m"
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"b, b, b"
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"m, m, m"
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"b"
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"m"
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Good. So mom, do you know what we know from what she just did? She can create the pah sound, and that means she can create every single sound
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and all we need now is speech therapy.
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Every single sound!
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That's what we know from that little bit.
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Welcome to Module 1 of Cleft Palate
Speech and Feeding Video Tutorials.
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In this module, we're going to talk about anatomy and physiology, typically how it develops,
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and then anatomy and physiology
of children with cleft.
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Now before we start, I want to say why this is so important.
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When babies are born with a cleft, they have a hole in their mouths and they can't create closure in the back of their mouths.
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So, their soft palate can't lift up and close back there, which is needed for many of the speech sounds:
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"p", "t", "k", "g", "sh", "j", "s", "t", "d"
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So, because those sounds can't be made, the baby begins to make different sounds
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and until the baby's palate is repaired and they can make those sounds appropriately,
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they develop habits of making sounds in a different way.
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So, what we're going to do now is go
through a whole series of video tutorials
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starting with the anatomy and
physiology, so that you can see exactly what is happening internally
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and the whole process of providing appropriate services to children whose speech is impaired due to their
cleft palate.
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Let's begin with looking at what happens in embryological development.
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So, the lips and the alveolus begin at about six to seven weeks of gestation.
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While the fetus is in the womb growing, the lips and alveolus are forming very early on
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and it starts a point called the incisive foramen,
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which is a very important part in the anatomy of cleft lip and palate development.
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The hard palate begins to form at eight to nine weeks of gestation,
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and the velum, the soft palate, and the uvula - that little thing that hangs down at the back of the throat -
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they are completely formed at about twelve weeks of gestation.
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So, now we're going to look at what typical anatomy looks like
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before we look at what the anatomy of cleft lip and palate looks like.
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So, here's an illustration done by Tina Young
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and you can see the dental arch,
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then the premaxilla is in that little triangle at the top, just under the nose.
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That's a very important thing, especially when children have bilateral cleft lips - you'll see that in the next module.
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After the premaxilla, we have the
incisive foramen, that dot I told you about -
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that spot is actually how the lips
and the palates fuse.
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It's sort of the beginning of the fusion point for the lips and the palate. More on that.
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Then, we have the palatine processes of the maxilla, the palatine bone, the posterior nasal spine, the palatine foramen, the hamulus,
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and here's two muscles: the tensor veli palatini, which many of us know
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is the muscle that opens and closes the eustachian tube, which connects the mouth to the middle ear.
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So, if you travel and you're on a plane and you need to yawn,
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what's happened is the tensor veli palatini has not opened up the eustachian tube
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to actually regulate the pressure between the airplane and what's happening in your middle ear.
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Very important with kids with cleft palate, because often that muscle is displaced.
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So, many kids with cleft palate have lots of conductive hearing loss.
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The levator veli palatini
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is the muscle that really is the primary muscle in soft palate closure.
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It lifts up and back the soft palate to
close against the posterior pharyngeal wall. More on that.
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And the uvula, which is
that little piece that hangs down.
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Here's how the muscles work. This is not all of the muscles, but most of the muscles.
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So, the velum is in green and that velum has to go up and back to the posterior pharyngeal wall for closure.
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There's also the lateral walls that are
moving in, but we can't do that with a profile picture.
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So, the velum goes up against the posterior pharyngeal wall,
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then we have the glossopalatini, or the palatoglossus, which pulls the velum down when it needs to move down.
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We also have the palatopharyngeus, that's mostly used for swallowing rather than speech,
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but has not been fully ruled out as having some use in velopharyngeal closure.
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Then, of course, the famous levator veli palatini
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and the constrictor pharyngeus superior or the superior pharyngeal constrictor.
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Those muscles move the lateral pharyngeal walls in.
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There's another muscle called the musculus uvulae. It's at the tip of velum - at the very tip of that green -
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and when the palate is being raised for velopharyngeal closure, it bulges the tip of the velum and also makes it a little bit stiff.
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So, what does the typical anatomy of the oral structure look like?
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Well, we've got the hard palate, the soft palate or velum, the uvula back there, and the tongue.
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We also look at the outside, because when a child has a cleft lip, the outside of the face can be involved.
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So, we have the nasal aperture, the columella, which is
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this cartilage between the tip of the nose and this part of the face.
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The nares - the openings. The philtrum, which is this
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kind of depression of a line - it actually is a depression that goes in between the two seams
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that if they're open, you'd have a cleft lip.
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And then, the cupid's bow.
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So, how did the oral structures develop?
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The reason we have that beautiful jacket there is because of the zipper that closes it.
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So now, we're talking about the incisive foramen.
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The incisive foramen is a point in the palate from which the lips fuse and from which the palate fuses.
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Now, imagine that the yellow dot is the bottom of the zipper
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and there's a zipper that starts at the yellow dot
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and goes up to the nose and closes one side of the lips,
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then another zipper starts on the other side and closes up.
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The palate starts at that yellow dot - that's the base of the zipper for the palate also - but, that closes from front to back.
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So, the lips close from the incisive foramen forward
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and the palate closes from the incisive foramen back.
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Why that is important is, when we start to look at cleft palate and cleft lip, we'll be able to see more clearly what
happened anatomically.
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What I love to do when I teach my classes is to just look at people's palates because they're all so different.
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So, here's a couple of pictures of palates, but you can also do this with your friends.
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It's a way of really getting to know people in a way you never did before, usually,
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which is to look at their palate and their uvula.
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So, have a look! Get your lights out and have a look.
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Here's a few beautifully functioning palates that look quite different.
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So that's the end of Module 1.1.
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The next Module is 1.2, where we're going to look at the anatomy and physiology of different types of clefts.
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Again, this is from www.leadersproject.org.
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There's many materials there, if you just came into this one module and you want to see all of the modules,
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go to www.leadersproject.org and they will all be there.