Will baby's development be affected if you don't treat oral connective tissue tightness?
A true or classic tongue-tie may require a simple scissors frenotomy, to assist with breastfeeding. Clinicians have accepted for many years, anecdotallly and from clinical observations, that children with untreated classic tongue-tie have difficulty licking ice-creams, using their tongue for oral hygiene, and pronunciation of the syllables which require the tip of the tongue to contact the bony palate.
The research doesn't show a link between tongue-tie and speech difficulties down the track, but this could be because the definitions of ankyloglossia are confused in existing studies, and diagnoses of 'posterior tongue-tie' are included alongside classic tongue-ties, obscuring the effects of a true or classic tongue-tie.
Parents are often told that if they don't deal with what have been diagnosed as oral connective tissue or fascial restrictions, their baby will develop a range of problems in later childhood. You might have heard that your baby could develop
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Poor development of the facial and palatine bones
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Snoring
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Sleep problems
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Behavioural problems including Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
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Asymmetric neuromotor movement patterns and development
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Feeding difficulties.
There is no evidence to support these claims, and no reason - when we think about underlying mechanisms - to think these claims make sense. Such claims are based upon misunderstandings about orofacial development, neuromotor patterns, neurodevelopmental disorders, and childhood sleep.
Your little one deserves the best possible support for his or her development. But you and your family also deserve accurate, evidence-based information to help this happen.