Cleft lip and cleft palate are congenital conditions in which parts of the lip or roof of the mouth do not fully form during early pregnancy, potentially affecting feeding, speech, hearing, and facial development.
A "cleft" means a split or separation. A cleft palate refers to the roof of your mouth, with or without the lip being split as well. Oral clefts are one of the most common birth defects. A child can be born with both a cleft lip and a cleft palate, or a cleft in just one area. During normal fetal development between the sixth and eleventh week of pregnancy, the two sides of the lip and palate fuse together. In babies born with a cleft lip or cleft palate, one or both of these splits failed to come together.
There are three primary types of clefts. Cleft lip/palate is when both the palate and lip are cleft, which represents about 50 percent of all clefts. About one in 1,000 babies is born with a cleft lip/palate. Up to 13 percent of cases involve other birth defects and occur more often in male children. It is more common in Asian populations and certain groups of American Indians, but less common in African American populations.
Isolated cleft palate is the term used when a cleft occurs only in the palate. About one in 2,000 babies are born with this type of cleft (the incidence of submucous cleft palate, a type of isolated cleft palate, is one in 1,200). This represents about 30 percent of all clefts. All ethnic groups have a similar risks for this type of cleft, but it occurs more often in female children. Isolated cleft lip refers to a cleft in the lip only accounting for 20 percent of all clefts.




