
Tongue Tie Solutions
This is Sylvia’s special page of links related to solving breastfeeding issues resulting from ankyloglossia, a birth defect more commonly known as “tongue tie.”
Is My Baby Tongue-tied? - Excellent photos of posterior tongue-tie in this article by internationally renown speaker and lactation consultant, Catherine Watson Genna.
Breastfeeding
and Frenulums
- More excellent pictures and tongue tie information on an 84-page pdf
presentation by Dr Brian Palmer, dated Dec. 2003.
(Note: It starts with a 28-page introduction which includes photos of cadavers
for anatomy purposes. You may want to skip that section and go straight to
the pictures of tongue tied infants and children, and the slides that talk about
the consequences of tongue tie.)
Tongue
Tie – from Confusion to Clarity
- Links to many helpful sites addressing this common birth defect, listed under
three headings:
General Information on Tongue
Tie
Breastfeeding and Tongue Tie
Surgery for Tongue Tie
Congential
Tongue-Tie and Its Impact on Breastfeeding
American Academy of Pediatrics Summer 2004.
This article is the best source for more information about type I, II, III, IV
tongue tie.
Tongue-tie
Videos
prepared by the respected Jeanne Ballard MD.
“There are two YouTube (yes, YouTube) videos here, each about 4 minutes in
length.
The first one shows an assessment being done, using the Hazelbaker Assessment
Tool (and showing Mom's ouchy nipple); the second shows the actual clipping
procedure, and baby's immediate post-procedure feed. They are fabulous.” - Liz
Brooks, JD, IBCLC
Ankyloglossia in Breastfeeding Infants: The Effect of Frenotomy on Maternal Nipple Pain and Latch - a study published in Breastfeeding Medicine, vol. 1, issue 4, 2006.
"Frenulotomy for Breastfeeding Infants With Ankyloglossia: Effect on Milk Removal and Sucking Mechanism as Imaged by Ultrasound" - An Australian research study conducted by Dr. Donna T. Geddes and others. The evidence shows that for infants with ankyloglossia, the surgical treatment (frenulotomy) changes the tongue movement of breastfeeding infants and improves feeding evidenced by increased milk-transfer and feeding efficiency and decreased maternal perception of pain. (Published in Pediatrics, vol. 122, no. 1, July 2008.)
Breastfeeding
should be fun and enjoyable: Why does it hurt when I breastfeed?
A dentist’s pictorial description of tongue tie, including the benefits for
releasing tongue tie, and the procedure for tongue tie release. Slide show
by Lawrence Kotlow DDS, 2010.
copyright © 2011 Sylvia Boyd — Updated Apr. 4, 2011
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