Three-dimensional assessment of nose and lip morphology in North Sudanese subjects with Down syndrome

Angle Orthod. 2011 Jan;81(1):107-14. doi: 10.2319/042510-222.1.

Abstract

Objective: To detail the nasolabial morphologic characteristics of North Sudanese subjects with Down syndrome (DS).

Materials and methods: Nasolabial morphology was assessed three-dimensionally in 64 North Sudanese subjects with DS aged 4 to 34 years and in 682 sex- and age-matched controls. Three-dimensional facial coordinates were collected using a laser scan, and selected distances, angles, areas, and volumes were computed. Subject and reference data were compared by computing z-scores and Student's t-tests.

Results: The nose was significantly smaller (area) in subjects with DS than in reference subjects, and it had a different shape (more flat angle of alar slope, more acute nasal tip angle). The vertical (nasal bridge length, nose height) and anteroposterior (nasal tip protrusion) dimensions were reduced, while the horizontal dimensions (alar base width, inferior widths of the nostrils) were increased. The nasolabial angle was increased. The cutaneous lip volume was significantly smaller, while the vermilion lip area was larger in the subjects with DS. The mouth and philtrum widths were significantly reduced, while the vermilion height was significantly increased.

Conclusion: Analyzed subjects with DS had a hypoplastic nose and different upper and lower lips than did reference, normal subjects.

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Adult
  • Arabs
  • Black People*
  • Case-Control Studies
  • Child
  • Child, Preschool
  • Down Syndrome / pathology*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Imaging, Three-Dimensional
  • Lip / abnormalities*
  • Male
  • Nose / abnormalities*
  • Sudan
  • Young Adult