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Dive into the research topics where Erik Dahl is active.

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Featured researches published by Erik Dahl.


The Cleft Palate-Craniofacial Journal | 1992

A six-center international study of treatment outcome in patients with clefts of the lip and palate: Part 4. Assessment of nasolabial appearance

Catherine Asher-McDade; Viveca Brattström; Erik Dahl; John McWilliam; Kirsten Mølsted; Dennis A. Plint; Birte Prahl-Andersen; Gunvor Semb; William C. Shaw

One hundred and fifteen frontal and profile photographs of the nasolabial area of subjects with complete unilateral clefts of the lip and palate from six European centers were assessed. Four components of the nasolabial area were rated separately by a panel of judges using a five-point scale of attractiveness. The Tukey multiple comparison test showed significant differences between the centers. The relative position of the six centers in this study followed a similar pattern to their respective positions in the cephalometric and dental cast studies.


The Cleft Palate-Craniofacial Journal | 1992

A six-center international study of treatment outcome in patients with clefts of the lip and palate: Part 5. General discussion and conclusions

William C. Shaw; Erik Dahl; Catherine Asher-McDade; Viveca Brattström; Mike Mars; John McWilliam; Kirsten Mølsted; Dennis A. Plint; Birte Prahl-Andersen; Chris Roberts; Gunvor Semb

Part 5 is the final part of a series of five articles reporting on an international, multicenter clinical audit of treatment outcome for complete UCLP. A number of recommendations for the methodology of future studies is made especially with respect to entry criteria, sample size, assumptions of homogeneity, and the reproducibility and validity of outcome measures. The findings of the present study regarding clinical procedures are presented tentatively, and improvement and extension of the methodology are required. It appears, however, that acceptable results can be achieved by different programs and ultimately clinical choices may be based on factors such as complexity, costs, and demands of treatment. Standardization, centralization, and the participation of high volume operators were associated with good outcomes, and nonstandardization and the participation of low volume operators with poor outcomes. Therapeutic factors associated with good outcomes were the employment of a vomer flap to close the anterior palate, and poor outcomes with primary bone grafting and with active presurgical orthopedics.


The Cleft Palate-Craniofacial Journal | 1992

A six-center international study of treatment outcome in patients with clefts of the lip and palate: Part 3. Dental Arch Relationships

Michael Mars; Catherine Asher-McDade; Viveca Brattström; Erik Dahl; John McWilliam; Kirsten Mølsted; Dennis A. Plint; Birte Prahl-Andersen; Gunvor Semb; William C. Shaw

One hundred and forty-nine dental casts of subjects with complete unilateral clefts of the lip and palate from six European cleft palate centers were assessed by means of the Goslon Yardstick. The Yardstick proved capable of discriminating between the quality of the dental arch relationships between the six centers. Two centers showed especially poor results. Three centers obtained satisfactory results although differing surgical techniques were used in these centers. One of the centers showing satisfactory dental arch relationships employed a more complex and expensive treatment program than the other two centers, which both used simpler centralized treatment regimens.


The Cleft Palate-Craniofacial Journal | 1992

A six-center international study of treatment outcome in patients with clefts of the lip and palate: Part 1. Principles and study design

William C. Shaw; Catherine Asher-McDade; Viveca Brattström; Erik Dahl; John McWilliam; Kirsten Mølsted; Dennis A. Plint; Birte Prahl-Andersen; Gunvor Semb

This article describes the design of an intercenter comparative study of treatment outcome in the treatment of children with a unilateral complete cleft of the lip and palate. The rationale and aims of this study are defined and treatment schemes of the participating centers are described. The findings are presented in a series of three papers (Parts 2, 3, and 4) dealing with the comparison of craniofacial form, dental arch relationships, and nasolabial appearance. In Part 5, conclusions and general recommendations regarding future research are discussed.


The Cleft Palate-Craniofacial Journal | 1992

A six-center international study of treatment outcome in patients with clefts of the lip and palate: Part 2. Craniofacial form and soft tissue profile.

Kirsten Mølsted; Catherine Asher-McDade; Viveca Brattström; Erik Dahl; Michael Mars; John McWilliam; Dennis A. Plint; Birte Prahl-Andersen; Gunvor Semb; William C. Shaw

The craniofacial morphology and the soft tissue profile were evaluated in this part of the intercenter study of the European Cleft Lip and Palate Research Group. The sample was comprised of cephalometric x-rays of the full cohort of 151 cases from the six European cleft palate centers. The facial morphology in complete unilateral cleft lip and palate patients was evaluated by means of roentgen cephalometry. Approximately 25 consecutive cases from each of six European cleft palate centers were compared. Only one center showed notable and consistent differences from the others. A contributing factor for these differences may be an inconsistent treatment regimen with many surgeons involved. Analysis of the soft tissue profile between the centers showed more pronounced differences than analysis of the skeletal profile. The treatment outcome in centers with more complex or expensive programs was no better than those centers using simpler management approaches.


The Cleft palate journal | 1990

Asymmetry of the maxilla in children with complete unilateral cleft lip and palate.

Kirsten Mølsted; Erik Dahl

Craniofacial asymmetry was analyzed in 31 children with unilateral cleft lip and palate (UCLP) and compared to a group of 24 children with incomplete clefts of the lip (CL). Symmetry was evaluated from 32 variables on posteroanterior cephalometric radiographs. Two types of asymmetry were identified: In the first, there was a positional deviation and a change of arch shape of the maxillary segment on the cleft side. The basal maxillary width was similar in the two groups. At the dentoalveolar level a decrease in width was localized to the cleft side in the UCLP group. Maxillary height of the cleft segment was reduced. The second type was related to the anterior part of the maxilla and the nasal septum. The inferior border of the bony part of the nasal septum deviated towards the cleft side. The anterior nasal spine and the midpoint between the upper central incisors deviated toward the noncleft side, but to a different degree indicating a vertical tilting of the premaxillary region.


The Cleft Palate-Craniofacial Journal | 1995

Cranial Base in Newborns with Complete Cleft Lip and Palate: Radiographic Study

Kirsten Mølsted; Inger Kjær; Erik Dahl

In a 1993 study, Mølsted and colleagues found an increased width of the spheno-occipital synchondrosis in newborns with complete clefts of the lip, alveolus, and palate compared with newborns with incomplete clefts. As the spheno-occipital synchondrosis represents remnants of the early chondrocranium that later ossifies and incorporates in the cranial base, it is possible that an inborn alteration, such as a deviant growth of cartilage, or a delayed maturation in the early development of the cartilaginous cranial base, can affect not only the length and the width of the cranial base, but also the petrous portion of the temporal bone and the nasal septum, as these structures also have a cartilaginous origin. The purpose of the present study was to measure the cranial base width, including the width of the maxilla, and to measure the bilateral angulation of the petrous portion of the temporal bone and the sphenoid bone in 3-month-old children with complete clefts and in 3-month-old children with an incomplete cleft of the lip, and to compare the two groups. Fifty-two children with complete clefts (CLP) without associated malformations comprised the test group. Forty-eight children with a minor, incomplete cleft lip (CL) constituted the control group. The results of the comparison showed marked differences between the CLP and CL groups. In the CLP children, the cranial base width and the bilateral angulation of the sphenoid bone increased. An increased angulation was also seen between left and right sides of the pars petrosa. Furthermore, increased maxillary width was found.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


The Cleft Palate-Craniofacial Journal | 1993

A six-center international study of treatment outcome in patients with clefts of the lip and palate: evaluation of maxillary asymmetry.

Kirsten Mølsted; Erik Dahl; Viveca Brattström; John McWilliam; Gunvor Semb

This investigation was carried out by the European Cleft Lip and Palate Research Group. The purpose of this part of the investigation was to compare and evaluate maxillary asymmetry in children born with complete unilateral cleft lip and palate treated at cleft palate centers with different surgical management. Posteroanterior radiographs from three of the six participating centers were included in the investigation. Statistically significant differences were found in the symmetry of the anterior part of the maxillary complex. Children with a primary bonegrafting procedure involved in their primary treatment procedure had a more symmetric dentoalveolar development. Children from centers with primary surgical procedures including a vomer plasty and no involvement of the alveolar process had a more asymmetric development with a tilted premaxilla and a deviating inclination of the central incisors.


Scandinavian Journal of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery and Hand Surgery | 1993

A multicentre comparison of treatment regimens for unilateral cleft lip and palate using a multiple regression model

Kirsten Mølsted; Erik Dahl; Lene Theil Skovgaard; Catherine Asher-McDade; Viveca Brattström; Andrew McCance; B. Prahl-Andersen; Gunvor Semb; Bill Shaw

The European Cleft Lip and Palate Research Group consists of specialists in orthodontics from six centres for the treatment of cleft palate in northern Europe. The purpose of this part of the multicentre study was to investigate whether differences in outcomes could be explained by specific treatment regimens. Three regimens that were assumed to influence the outcome of treatment were selected: Presurgical orthopaedics, closure of the palate, and primary bone grafting. The sample comprised 151 children with complete unilateral cleft lip and palate from the six centres. The result of multiple regression analysis showed that within that sample it was not possible to reach definite conclusions as to which factors exerted the most favourable influence on facial growth, but primary bone grafting was associated with reduced maxillary inclination and presurgical orthopedics with increased mandibular inclination.


The Cleft Palate-Craniofacial Journal | 1993

Spheno-Occipital Synchondrosis in Three-Month-Old Children with Clefts of the Lip and Palate: A Radiographic Study

Kirsten Mølsted; Inger Kjær; Erik Dahl

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Gunvor Semb

University of Manchester

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Birte Prahl-Andersen

Academic Center for Dentistry Amsterdam

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Michael Mars

Great Ormond Street Hospital

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Inger Kjær

University of Copenhagen

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Chris Roberts

University of Manchester

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