Looking for all the thoughts and opinions on these things for a child. Worth the effort and procedure? Are tongue ties THAT big of a concern when child compensates well? Any success or "wish we had" stories?
Kool said:
What is the problem for which a frenectomy is supposedly the answer?
milkman00 said:
We've been dealing with this as well. One lady said he had slight posterior tongue tie. Said 85%of issue could be resolved thru myofunctional therapy.
Most recent pedi ent said she didn't see a tongue tie. Only been doing myofunctional therapy for 2 months. He can stick it out, but has speech issues.
Ironically he never took to pacifier. Now I wonder if that would have helped him build tongue strength amd control.
Not many people know of myofunctional therapy. Found out it is covered by insurance, but few providers amd the one local is out of network.
Good luck. Myofunctional has been most beneficial so far after years of basic speech therapy.
Kool said:
I will just put this out there and I welcome all of the negative comments that it will receive, but tongue tie is WAY over-diagnosed in the pediatric population. There is a big "cottage industry" out there that has infiltrated lactation consultants, pediatricians, speech and language therapists, dentists, and ENTs around the issue.
Just last week, I told an adult patient that the integrative dentist offering "gentle laser" treatment for a "posterior tongue tie" would not, in all likelihood, cure her neck pain (with MRI documented cervical disc disease).
In a neonate who is having trouble latching, staying on latch, and breastfeeding in general, if there is a tongue tie, a release can be tremendously helpful.
If the child has speech delay and articulations errors because of a tongue tie, a frenectomy can be helpful. Speech therapy should be initiated before and continued after it is done.
There is mixed evidence, at best, that tongue tie is CAUSATIVE in obstructive sleep apnea. There is an association between the two, but correlation does not equal causation. My grandparents had a rooster that would crow every morning before the sun came up. After that rooster died, magically, the sun continued to rise in the morning.
Forward head position is more likely nasal obstruction and adenoid and tonsillar hypertrophy.
Tread carefully out there.
Kool said:
Tonsils and adenoids tend to have their greatest growth between 2 and 8 years of age, so what was not a problem in the past might be a problem now. Nasal saline and Flonase can help with snoring and mild apnea (see the other thread nearby). Mouth breathing during sleep isn't always a problem or emblematic of an issue. When you hit REM sleep, all muscle tone is lost and the mouth is going to go wherever gravity takes it. Definitely listen for apnea at night, though, and the best time to listen is after the child has been asleep at least an hour and a half (first REM period not normally attained before then), better time to listen is far into sleep.
lazuras_dc said:
I think Kool is definitely correct in the over diagnosis or should I say over treatment of tongue and lip ties.
The airway resistance would have to be evaluated if it is in fact due to some nasal issue in which an allergist could help with (nasal steroids, etc)
Or if its an issue with tonsils/muscle tone in the throat. Or perhaps its an oral condition such as narrowing of the palate and crowding/tongue etc.
I have a colleague that uses Vivos oral appliance that seems to help a lot in pediatric patient with airway/sleep. Might be something to look into that could be helpful short of a surgical procedure for tonsils etc.
Myofunctional therapy is definitely something new on our radar as dentists, but I think it shows promise.
aggiederelict said:
Myofunctional Therapy puts off a craniosacral vibe to me from the people I have met that do that kind of work.
milkman00 said:
When yall did expansion did they do anything on the bottom or just the top?
bigtruckguy3500 said:
If I ever decided to look into a frenectomy, I would definitely go to an ENT only. It might be more expensive, but I have heard of a few horror stories from non physicians doing them and things going very badly.
That being said, I will echo the above in that I have heard very little support from pediatricians and ENT docs in support of routine frenectomy.
bigtruckguy3500 said:
If I ever decided to look into a frenectomy, I would definitely go to an ENT only. It might be more expensive, but I have heard of a few horror stories from non physicians doing them and things going very badly.
That being said, I will echo the above in that I have heard very little support from pediatricians and ENT docs in support of routine frenectomy.
bigtruckguy3500 said:
The main issue I've heard about is post operative bleeding. Probably low probability event, but in one case the kid has permanent brain damage due to anoxic brain injury. And to be fair, I think an oral surgeon would be just as good of an option (possibly marginally better) as an ENT. I just have more confidence in an oral surgeon or ENT in their ability to handle a post operative bleed, and to not discharge a patient unless the bleeding is well controlled. Dental offices close at 5pm or earlier, and all the complications get seen in the ER, where ENT/OMFS or the ER doc has to handle it.
PDWT_12 said:
Interesting timing, my wife took my son for an evaluation with a myofunctional therapist yesterday. We saw her once when he was baby struggling with some stuff as an infant and had his tongue ties cut. I think that helped at the time in some ways, but our pediatrician would disagree with that.
Our main concerns right now are some ADHD type symptoms, and have had a few people recommend getting his airway checked out. He's got a super crowded mouth with his new teeth coming in, and has already seen an ortho who said an expander is in his near future.
It's always a fine line with specialists like that, they have really good info and ideas, and also often seem to believe every issue a kid has can be solved by their recommendations.
Good luck the rest of the way.
spike427 said:
Have you looked into a REMplenish water bottle?
maroonpivo said:
My 7 year old had a frenectomy done last fall. It never affected her eating as an infant and was told as she aged it could be fine, but as she got older, when she smiled it was all you could see at the top of her lip, so we took care of it for cosmetics so she wouldn't have to deal with it later in life. Used an oral surgeon.
maroonpivo said:
My 7 year old had a frenectomy done last fall. It never affected her eating as an infant and was told as she aged it could be fine, but as she got older, when she smiled it was all you could see at the top of her lip, so we took care of it for cosmetics so she wouldn't have to deal with it later in life. Used an oral surgeon.
lazuras_dc said:
I assumed poster meant labial frenectomy when I read that post.