Topic Overview
What is tongue-tie?
Tongue-tie (ankyloglossia) is a birth defect in which the tissue
that attaches the tongue to the bottom of the mouth (lingual frenulum) is
abnormally short. Movements of the tongue may be restricted, depending on the
degree of attachment to the mouth.
See an illustration comparing a normal lingual frenulum with
tongue-tie
.
What causes tongue-tie?
Tongue-tie is an inherited birth defect. Usually the mother or
father or a close relative also had the condition.
Most often a baby with tongue-tie does not have other birth
defects; however, tongue-tie occurs more frequently in babies whose mothers
abused cocaine during pregnancy and in babies with other congenital conditions
that affect the mouth and face, such as X-linked
cleft palate.
What are the symptoms?
Many babies with tongue-tie do not have symptoms. The lingual
frenulum stretches as the child grows or adapts to the tongue restriction.
However, some children with tongue-tie have:
- Difficulty
latching
on to the mother's breast and sucking because
the tongue cannot move milk from the milk glands of the breast to the nipple.
Bottle-fed babies usually do not have feeding problems because it is easy to
get milk from the nipple of a bottle. - Speech problems because the
tip of the tongue cannot rise high enough to make (articulate) some sounds
clearly, such as t, d, z, s, th, n, and l.
- Personal or social
problems related to the restricted tongue movement. The restricted tongue can
make it difficult to play a wind instrument or to clean food off of the teeth
with the tongue. A child with tongue-tie may be ridiculed by peers.
How is tongue-tie diagnosed?
Tongue-tie usually is diagnosed by a physical exam of the mouth
and by the baby's symptoms. The health professional lifts the baby's tongue to
see whether the lingual frenulum is short and the degree it extends to the tip
of the tongue. In an older child or adult, the health professional observes the
shape and movements of the tongue when it is protruded.
How is it treated?
Many children with tongue-tie adapt to the tongue restriction, or
the lingual frenulum stretches as they grow. If your child has tongue-tie, you
may choose to wait and see whether his or her lingual frenulum stretches on its
own or whether surgery may be needed to release the tongue.
Surgery may be needed if your child has significant
breast-feeding, speech, or personal or social problems caused by the tongue
restriction. If surgery is done before 1 year of age, a simple procedure to
clip the lingual frenulum (frenotomy) is usually all that is needed to release
the tongue. If surgery is done after 1 or 2 years of age, a procedure that
clips the lingual frenulum and closes the wound with stitches (frenuloplasty)
may be required.
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