Bobak Ghaheri

Bobak Ghaheri

Sep 08, 2021

Group 6 Copy 794
3

Published!

I want to sincerely thank you all for your contributions to this project. We were able to publish the work in the largest ENT journal, the official journal of our Academy. I envision that this study will have a major impact in the understanding of how tongue tie affects infant feeding. Below, I've pasted the abstract, but please email me if you'd like the PDF for research purposes (drghaheri at gmail dot com). Thank you again!


Objective

Infants with posterior tongue-tie (PTT) can have substantial difficulty with breastfeeding and bottle-feeding. This study aimed to address the dearth in investigational objective data surrounding PTT release to better quantify the postoperative impacts of frenotomy for ankyloglossia.


Study Design

Prospective randomized, controlled trial.


Setting

Private practice clinic.


Methods

In a prospective, randomized controlled trial, infants 3 to 16 weeks of age with PTT undergoing frenotomy were examined using a bottle-feeding system capable of objectively measuring tongue function. Validated patient-reported outcome measures were also obtained simultaneously.


Results

Forty-seven infants with PTT were enrolled into an observational/control arm (n = 23) or interventional/surgical treatment arm (n = 24). The total cohort consisted of 29 (61.7%) male infants with a median age of 39 days. At the day 10 time point, the interventional arm demonstrated statistically significant improvement in 11 objectively obtained feeding metrics, indicating faster tongue speed, more rhythmic and coordinated sucking motions, and a tongue more capable of adapting to varying feeding demands. Significant improvement in breastfeeding self-efficacy was reported in the interventional group while poor self-confidence persisted in the observational group. Infant reflux symptoms improved in the interventional group while not in the control group. Nipple pain also persisted in the control group but improved in the surgical cohort.


Conclusions

When measured 10 days after frenotomy for PTT, infants improve feeding parameters using an objective bottle-feeding system. Similar improvements are seen with patient-reported outcomes when PTT is released. Posterior tongue-tie is a valid clinical concern, and surgical release can improve infant and maternal symptoms.

3 comments

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  • Brynn Leroux
    Brynn LerouxBacker
    Congrats, Bobby!!! I know you have worked so hard on this.
    Sep 09, 2021
  • Randy Ligh
    Randy LighBacker
    Great article to shed light on a much needed area! Your work benefits so many people. Randy Ligh (San Jose)
    Sep 08, 2021
  • Nick Prater
    Nick PraterBacker
    Thank you, Bobbi Hope this shakes some monkeys from their trees.
    Sep 08, 2021

About This Project

Some babies are born with tongue-tie where an unusually short or tight band of tissue tethers the bottom of the tongue to the floor of the mouth. Babies with tongue-tie can have a hard time breastfeeding. We hypothesize that with a lingual frenotomy, a surgical procedure where the surgeon releases the tether, patients demonstrate improved upward mobility of the tongue and improved sucking mechanics. We will test this using an FDA-approved bottle that measures suck quality.

Blast off!

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