ObjectiveThis study aims to obtain a three-dimensional reconstruction model based on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data of patients with different degrees of unilateral cleft lip and analyze the anatomy and changes in multiple groups of nasolabial muscles under dynamic and static conditions.MethodsOne normal person and four adult patients with unilateral cleft lip were included, and MRI was performed under static (upper and lower lips closed naturally) and dynamic (pout and grin) conditions. 3D Slicer software was used to reconstruct the model and draw the anatomic morphology of nasolabial muscles. The distance between the junction (where the muscle merges into the orbicularis oris) of the levator muscle, zygomaticminor muscle, and zygomatic major muscle to the median sagittal plane, the starting point to the junction point, the dynamic and static junction points, and the angle between the connection of dynamic and static junctions and the horizontal plane were measured under three kinds of movements, and the ratio was calculated.ResultsIn all patients, under dynamic and static conditions, the distance from the muscle junction to the median sagittal plane, their ratios of the cleft side to the non-cleft side were all greater than 1. While the ratios of the distance from the starting point of the muscle to the junction point were less than 1. At static conditions, the two ratios of the same muscle increased gradiently with the severity of the cleft, and the ratio of the zygomatic minor muscle was prominent in the same patient. The ratio of the cleft side to the non-cleft side was greater than 1, and the value for comparison was the angle of the line from the static to the dynamic junction and the horizontal plane.ConclusionThe symmetry of the insertion site of the orbicularis oris and the linear distance of both sides of the muscle are related to muscle and cleft types. The angle of muscle contraction on the cleft side is greater than that on the non-cleft side.