Dingman Mouth Retractor — Modern Cleft-Palate Standard
Reed O Dingman (1906-1985), Ann Arbor plastic surgeon and one of the founders of modern American craniofacial surgery, designed his self-retaining mouth retractor in 1960 specifically for cleft-palate repair. The Dingman differs from a routine mouth gag in that it incorporates a tongue blade, cheek retractors and a side frame in a single fixed assembly — the operator sets the geometry once at the start of the operation and the entire field is held open without further adjustment for the duration of the procedure.
What the Dingman replaced
Before Dingman’s design cleft-palate repair required an assistant to hold the cheek retractors, an anaesthetist to manage the airway-and-gag combination, and a surgeon to operate — three pairs of hands in a small operative field. The Dingman’s self-retaining frame eliminates the cheek-holding assistant, simplifying the operative team and reducing tactical confusion in a long technical operation. The 1960 publication of the design transformed cleft-palate surgery internationally within a decade.
Modern range of indications
Cleft-palate repair remains the primary indication; the Dingman is also used for cleft-lip-and-palate revision, velopharyngeal-insufficiency procedures, transoral approach to the parapharyngeal space, and the rare adult palatal-fistula closures. The retractor has become the symbol of paediatric craniofacial-surgery operative kits.





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