Valerie J Pereira, Emily See-Man Ching, Joanna Hoi-Man She, Wilson Shing Yu, Kendy Lau, Michael Chi-Fai Tong, Kathy Yuet-Sheung Lee
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The Nasometer® is a widely used clinical and research tool with diagnosis and outcome measurement utility. The objective of this study was to systematically examine the effect of age and gender on nasalance across the lifespan.
A systematic review was performed according to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews (PRISMA 2020).
University.
Children, adolescents, adults, and older adults.
Covidence Better Systematic Review Management; Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network Methodology (SIGN) Checklist 3 for risk of bias; Levels of evidence, Oxford Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine Levels of Evidence hierarchy; and effect size calculations using G*Power 3.
Nasalance (%) from the Nasometer™.
50 studies (from N = 1884) were included in the review. All were Level 3 (non-randomized controlled cohort) observational-analytic type studies. Only 10 (20%) of studies met a High Quality (low risk of bias) rating. Effect sizes were moderate for adults versus children (d = 0.717) and adults versus adolescents (d = 0.521) for oral text/passage. Gender differences were clinically significant for adolescent males and females with a moderate effect size (d = 0.545) for oronasal text/passage.
The systematic review provides objective and defined evidence as to the effects of age and gender on nasalance. Separate normative databases are implicated for specific age subgroups across the lifespan and for gender, particularly in adolescence. Review findings are applicable to other clinical groups where acquisition and/or progression occurs in adulthood/older adulthood.
期刊介绍:
The Cleft Palate-Craniofacial Journal (CPCJ) is the premiere peer-reviewed, interdisciplinary, international journal dedicated to current research on etiology, prevention, diagnosis, and treatment in all areas pertaining to craniofacial anomalies. CPCJ reports on basic science and clinical research aimed at better elucidating the pathogenesis, pathology, and optimal methods of treatment of cleft and craniofacial anomalies. The journal strives to foster communication and cooperation among professionals from all specialties.