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Dive into the research topics where Frank Åbyholm is active.

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Featured researches published by Frank Åbyholm.


BMJ | 2007

Folic acid supplements and risk of facial clefts: national population based case-control study

Allen J. Wilcox; Rolv T. Lie; Kari Solvoll; Jack A. Taylor; D. Robert McConnaughey; Frank Åbyholm; Hallvard Vindenes; Stein Emil Vollset; Christian A. Drevon

Objective To explore the role of folic acid supplements, dietary folates, and multivitamins in the prevention of facial clefts. Design National population based case-control study. Setting Infants born 1996-2001 in Norway. Participants 377 infants with cleft lip with or without cleft palate; 196 infants with cleft palate alone; 763 controls. Main outcome measures Association of facial clefts with maternal intake of folic acid supplements, multivitamins, and folates in diet. Results Folic acid supplementation during early pregnancy (≥400 �g/day) was associated with a reduced risk of isolated cleft lip with or without cleft palate after adjustment for multivitamins, smoking, and other potential confounding factors (adjusted odds ratio 0.61, 95% confidence interval 0.39 to 0.96). Independent of supplements, diets rich in fruits, vegetables, and other high folate containing foods reduced the risk somewhat (adjusted odds ratio 0.75, 0.50 to 1.11). The lowest risk of cleft lip was among women with folate rich diets who also took folic acid supplements and multivitamins (0.36, 0.17 to 0.77). Folic acid provided no protection against cleft palate alone (1.07, 0.56 to 2.03). Conclusions Folic acid supplements during early pregnancy seem to reduce the risk of isolated cleft lip (with or without cleft palate) by about a third. Other vitamins and dietary factors may provide additional benefit.


Scandinavian Journal of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery and Hand Surgery | 1981

Secondary bone grafting of alveolar clefts. A surgical/orthodontic treatment enabling a non-prosthodontic rehabilitation in cleft lip and palate patients

Frank Åbyholm; O Bergland; Gunvor Semb

A procedure combining grafting of cancellous bone to the residual cleft of the primary palate with subsequent orthodontic movement of teeth into the former cleft area is described. The preliminary results from the first 80 patients (89 clefts) are presented. The age of the patients at the bone grafting ranged from 8 to 18 years, and the observation time from 17 to 44 months. The results have been assessed 1) on the basis of dental radiographs and 2) clinically, by the response of the grafted area to the orthodontic movement of adjacent teeth. In 69 clefts in which the cleft side canine had been brought into its final position at the time of evaluation, the height of the interal-veolar septum was assessed to be approximately normal in 38% and slightly less than normal in 44%. A septum of insufficient height (less than 3/4 of the normal) had formed in 5 clefts (7%). Even in these cases, the main objects of the operation were fulfilled: The maxillary segments were stabilized, the teeth adjacent to the cleft ...


BMJ | 2008

Familial risk of oral clefts by morphological type and severity: population based cohort study of first degree relatives

Åse Sivertsen; Allen J. Wilcox; Rolv Skjærven; Hallvard Vindenes; Frank Åbyholm; Emily W. Harville; Rolv T. Lie

Objective To estimate the relative risk of recurrence of oral cleft in first degree relatives in relation to cleft morphology. Design Population based cohort study. Setting Data from the medical birth registry of Norway linked with clinical data on virtually all cleft patients treated in Norway over a 35 year period. Participants 2.1 million children born in Norway between 1967 and 2001, 4138 of whom were treated for an oral cleft. Main outcome measure Relative risk of recurrence of isolated clefts from parent to child and between full siblings, for anatomic subgroups of clefts. Results Among first degree relatives, the relative risk of recurrence of cleft was 32 (95% confidence interval 24.6 to 40.3) for any cleft lip and 56 (37.2 to 84.8) for cleft palate only (P difference=0.02). The risk of clefts among children of affected mothers and affected fathers was similar. Risks of recurrence were also similar for parent-offspring and sibling-sibling pairs. The “crossover” risk between any cleft lip and cleft palate only was 3.0 (1.3 to 6.7). The severity of the primary case was unrelated to the risk of recurrence. Conclusions The stronger family recurrence of cleft palate only suggests a larger genetic component for cleft palate only than for any cleft lip. The weaker risk of crossover between the two types of cleft indicates relatively distinct causes. The similarity of mother-offspring, father-offspring, and sibling-sibling risks is consistent with genetic risk that works chiefly through fetal genes. Anatomical severity does not affect the recurrence risk in first degree relatives, which argues against a multifactorial threshold model of causation.


Annals of Plastic Surgery | 1986

Secondary bone grafting and orthodontic treatment in patients with bilateral complete clefts of the lip and palate

O Bergland; Gunvor Semb; Frank Åbyholm; Henrik Borchgrevink; Gunnar Eskeland

The results of secondary bone grafting and orthodontic treatment in 41 patients with bilateral complete clefts of the lip and palate are reported. Good bone formation was found in 98% of the cleft sites grafted before the eruption of the canines, and in 80% of the clefts grafted later. Closure of both cleft spaces by orthodontic means was achieved in 20 of the 21 patients in the first group, and in 14 of the 20 patients in the second group. The bone grafts failed in one cleft site in 4 patients, all of which were regrafted with satisfactory results. In 2 patients one of the canines was later affected by external root resorption, necessitating endodontic treatment. Both the failures and the root resorptions occurred in patients bone grafted at an older age than was considered optimal for bilateral clefts: 10 to 11 years. Seven patients needed a bridge prosthesis, 3 of these over one cleft space only. Even these patients benefited greatly from bone grafting.


The Cleft Palate-Craniofacial Journal | 2005

Pharyngeal flap and sphincterplasty for velopharyngeal insufficiency have equal outcome at 1 year postoperatively: Results of a randomized trial

Frank Åbyholm; Linda L. D'Antonio; Sally L. Davidson Ward; Lillian Kjøll; Muhammad Saeed; William C. Shaw; Gerald M. Sloan; David Whitby; Helen V Worthington; Rosemary Wyatt; Gunvor Semb

Objective The aim of this trial was to compare the relative effectiveness (efficacy and morbidity) of two surgical procedures for correcting velopharyngeal insufficiency (VPI). Design This was an international multicenter randomized trial to study the outcome of two surgical procedures (flap and sphincter pharyngoplasty) for speech, incidence of sleep apnea, and surgical complications. Method Ninety-seven patients 3 to 25 years old with repaired cleft palate and previously identified VPI were enrolled from five centers in the United States, Norway, and the U.K. Data were collected at presurgery, 3 months postsurgery, and 12 months postsurgery for subsequent analysis blind to the procedure. Main outcome measures included perceptual speech parameters, sleep apnea, nasalance measures, endoscopic features, and surgical complications. Results Groups for both surgical procedures achieved a high level of clinical improvement. At 3 months postsurgery, elimination of hypernasal resonance was achieved in twice as many patients after the flap procedure. This reached significance. However, at 12 months postsurgery, no statistically significant difference in outcomes remained between the two procedures for resonance, nasalance, endoscopic outcomes, or surgical complications. Flap and sphincter pharyngoplasty rarely resulted in clinically significant sleep apnea, and no difference was detected between the two procedures in the long-term incidence of sleep apnea. Conclusions Despite strongly held views in the literature concerning the relative effectiveness and safety of flap and sphincter pharyngoplasty, no significant differences were detected 1 year postoperatively.


Scandinavian Journal of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery and Hand Surgery | 1979

Palatal Fistulae Following Cleft Palate Surgery

Frank Åbyholm; Henrik Borchgrevink; Gunnar Eskeland

The occurrence and treatment of palatal fistulae have been studied in 1108 CLP patients who had their primary operations performed during the years 1954–69. No fistulae were recorded in 263 patients with incomplete cleft of the primary palate only. These patients were excluded, leaving 845 patients for analysis. The Le Mesurier or Millard technique had been used for the primary lip operation, and the von Langenbeck procedure for closure of the palate; in complete clefts, the anterior part of the palate had been closed using Veaus vomer flap operation simultaneously with lip closure. The observation period ranged from 7 to 22 years, during which time each patient was examined at least once and the majority on several occasions by members of the cleft palate team. The overall incidence of fistulae was 18%. Fistulae were recorded in 11.3% of all complete clefts of the primary palate, and in 36.1% of all complete total clefts. In cases of cleft palate only, fistulae were found in 3.5% of the incomplete cleft...


Scandinavian Journal of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery and Hand Surgery | 1991

Craniofacial and occlusal characteristics in unilateral cleft lip and palate patients from four scandinavian centres

Hans Friede; Hans Enemark; Gunvor Semb; Gunnar Paulin; Frank Åbyholm; Stig Bolund; Jan Lilja; Lief Östrup

Craniofacial morphology and dental occlusion were studied at early school age in 15 consecutive patients with unilateral cleft lip and palate from each of four Scandinavian cleft centres. Treatment differed mainly in the techniques of palatal repair. Push-back closure of the palate particularly impaired maxillary development, which resulted in an increased incidence of crossbite and reduced intercanine distance when compared with patients who had been operated on by the von Langenbeck method or in whom the anterior palate had not yet been closed.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 1989

Altered Polymorphonuclear Neutrophilic Granulocyte Functions in Patients with Large Burns

Robert Bjerknes; Hallvard Vindenes; Jaakko PitkÄnen; John L. Ninnemann; Ole Didrik Laerum; Frank Åbyholm

Multiparameter flow cytometric analyses of polymorphonuclear neutrophilic granulocyte (PMNL) functions have been performed longitudinally in ten patients with large burns. The percentage of phagocytosing PMNLs was increased at admission (within 24 hours after injury) and through the first 10 days of hospitalization. The surface binding capacity and the ingestion of Staphylococcus aureus by each PMNL was increased during the same time period, and at day 2 the number of S. aureus ingested per patient PMNL was 35% higher than in the controls. The intracellular killing of Candida albicans was reduced by about 25% at admission. The microbicidal capacity was further compromised during the first 2 weeks after injury, with a reduction of intracellular killing of about 35% 5-10 days after admission. The kinetics of patient PMNL phagolysosomal acidification was altered during the first 20 days, as the initial alkalinization of the phagolysosomes documented in control PMNLs could not be demonstrated in PMNLs from patients with burns. In addition, measurements of maximal phagolysosomal acidification showed a lower pH in patient phagolysosomes than in the controls during the first 5 days. The patient PMNL H2O2 production was reduced at admission and through the first 10 days, with an oxidative burst that was 46% lower than the controls at day 5. The intracellular degradation of S. aureus proteins and DNA was slightly but significantly reduced at day 5 and day 10 after admission. The impairment of PMNL microbicidal capacity correlated with total body surface area burn.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Acta Obstetricia et Gynecologica Scandinavica | 2007

Completeness of registration of oral clefts in a medical birth registry: a population-based study

Christer Kubon; Åse Sivertsen; Hallvard Vindenes; Frank Åbyholm; Allen J. Wilcox; Rolv T. Lie

Background. Epidemiological surveillance and research on birth defects require accurate diagnosis and adequate registration. In this regard, the performance of national birth registries is not well described. Methods. We linked clinical data from all 3,616 cleft cases treated in Norway between 1967 and 1998 with data from the Medical Birth Registry of Norway, and calculated the proportion of clinically verified cases reported to the Registry, stratified by severity. Results. The cleft type most completely ascertained was cleft lip and palate (CLP), of which 94% were reported. Ascertainment was less complete for cleft lip alone (83% recorded), and cleft palate only (CPO) (57% recorded). For each of the three types of clefts, completeness of reporting depended on severity of the cleft. For example, 71% of cases with severe CPO were reported, while only 11% of cases with mild CPO were reported. Conclusions. Ascertainment was strongly related to cleft type and severity. To the degree that severity of birth defects may be related to their cause, these patterns of registration have implications for surveillance of birth defects as well as the conduct of etiologic studies. The large proportion of cleft palate cases unrecorded at birth suggests that clinical examination of the newborn palate is often inadequate.


Scandinavian Journal of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery and Hand Surgery | 1994

Surgical Treatment of Gynaecomastia Five Years' Experience with Liposuction

Frode Samdal; Geir Kleppe; Petter F. Amland; Frank Åbyholm

Since liposuction became part of our surgical regimen in 1988, we have operated on 67 patients for gynaecomastia during the five year period 1988-1992. Sixty two of the patients were seen at an extra follow up 4-59 months (means 29 months) postoperatively. Compared to studies that did not include liposuction as part of the operation, we found a lower incidence of postoperative complications and a higher degree of patient satisfaction. Preoperative distinction between adipose and glandular tissue is difficult, and we therefore consider that liposuction should be used during the first part of the operation in nearly all cases of gynaecomastia. Regardless the amount of fat, tunnelling and suction are beneficial, because they help to refine the peripheral contour and define the glandular tissue. Liposuction seems to help the skin to contract, and skin resections are rarely indicated.

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Gunvor Semb

University of Manchester

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Åse Sivertsen

Haukeland University Hospital

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Jack A. Taylor

National Institutes of Health

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