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Date: | Sat, 30 Jun 2007 17:55:34 -0400 |
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If all is going very well for a tongue tied infant and mom with
breastfeeding, I just encourage mom to be watchful and make sure she's
allowing baby to feed often enough and for as long as he needs to
(tongue-tied babies who are using compensatory tongue movements are not
as efficient, and generally need longer times to feed, and sometimes
more feedings per day). If mom understands this, all can be well for
breastfeeding.
If the palate remains narrow, mom can be advised to consult with an
orthodontist when her child is 10 or 11 years old. The palate can be
expanded then (maxillary expansion is the name of the technique). If a
baby is breastfeeding very well but has a narrow palate, I will
encourage mom and dad to remember those two words for the future if
still needed.
Another possible concern is that alternative tongue and jaw movements
may cause facial pain later in life (TMJ syndrome, trigeminal neuralgia,
and chronic "sinusitis" are all just beginning to be investigated in
terms of the muscle activation used in chewing motions). There are
several ways to activate the facial muscles to open the jaw, close the
jaw, etc. and perhaps some of these are better than others for long term
comfort and health. There are a few recent EMG (electromyogram) studies
that examine these questions, but none that factored in whether or not
the subjects were breastfed, or whether or not they have a tight lingual
frenulum. This is an avenue for future study.
Until we know a lot more, we don't know how to counsel parents of
children who are breastfeeding effectively in terms of frenotomy for
prevention of future problems. I generally encourage parents to look at
Dr Brian Palmer's website (http://www.brianpalmerdds.com) and decide for
themselves.
My own feeling from the outcomes I've seen so far is that if the palate
is relatively normal and breastfeeding is going well, leave it alone;
but if the palate is very narrow that can cause difficulties with room
for the teeth and restrict the nasal airspace and frenotomy may help
reduce future problems.
I usually refer babies right away for evaluation:
if we can't get the latch comfortable for mom using good technique
if baby can't keep tongue tip over gum ridge consistently while sucking
a (gloved) finger
if baby has little ability to elevate his tongue tip (more likely to
cause speech problems later)
or if baby has a very abnormal palate (which means the tongue has done a
very poor job of shaping it).
Catherine Watson Genna, IBCLC NYC
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