News

A posterior tongue tie isn't uncommon in newborn babies. While this congenital condition can make breastfeeding difficult and may lead to speech delays later in life, it's easy to correct. Here's how.
Then, in 2004, a new kind of tongue-tie was brought to the clinical mainstream in an opinion published in a physician's newsletter — a hidden, or posterior, tongue-tie, which is "difficult to ...
A posterior tongue-tie happens when the frenulum is attached just to the base of tongue. It’s less obvious, but a practitioner can pick it up by looking closely at the movement of the tongue.
Tongue-tie is more than a just a metaphor for stumbling over your words. It’s an actual oral condition that can impact many things from breastfeeding to your airway, from speech to dental health ...
A posterior tongue tie can cause the same problems as an anterior tongue tie, even though it isn’t as easily visible; Symptoms for a posterior tongue tie include: ...
Babies with tongue tie usually have a poor latch, often make a clicking sound, feed frequently, fall asleep during feeding and have frequent digestive problems like burping, excessive gas and reflux.
It's very quick and takes three seconds," she says. "If it's a posterior tongue tie, a lot of times I recommend doing some suck training exercises or some cranial sacral therapy stretches." ...
On Monday’s show Stacey then went on to explain that her son will have an operation to have the posterior tongue tie which will require a part of his tongue to be cut free in order to provide it ...