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The effects of frenotomy on breastfeeding

Although the interference of tongue-tie with breastfeeding is a controversial subject, The use of lingual frenotomy has been widely indicated by health professionals. OBJECTIVE: : To observe changes in breastfeeding patterns after lingual frenotomy concerning the number of sucks, pause length betwee...

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Autores principales: MARTINELLI, Roberta Lopes de Castro, MARCHESAN, Irene Queiroz, GUSMÃO, Reinaldo Jordão, HONÓRIO, Heitor Marques, BERRETIN-FELIX, Giédre
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Faculdade de Odontologia de Bauru da Universidade de São Paulo 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4428459/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26018306
http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1678-775720140339
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author MARTINELLI, Roberta Lopes de Castro
MARCHESAN, Irene Queiroz
GUSMÃO, Reinaldo Jordão
HONÓRIO, Heitor Marques
BERRETIN-FELIX, Giédre
author_facet MARTINELLI, Roberta Lopes de Castro
MARCHESAN, Irene Queiroz
GUSMÃO, Reinaldo Jordão
HONÓRIO, Heitor Marques
BERRETIN-FELIX, Giédre
author_sort MARTINELLI, Roberta Lopes de Castro
collection PubMed
description Although the interference of tongue-tie with breastfeeding is a controversial subject, The use of lingual frenotomy has been widely indicated by health professionals. OBJECTIVE: : To observe changes in breastfeeding patterns after lingual frenotomy concerning the number of sucks, pause length between groups of sucking and mother's complaints. MATERIAL AND METHODS: : Oral yes/no questions about breastfeeding symptoms and sucking/swallowing/breathing coordination were answered by the mothers of 109, 30 day old infants. On the same day the infants had their lingual frenulum assessed by administering a lingual frenulum protocol. After the assessment, all tongue-tied infants were referred for frenotomy; nevertheless, only 14 underwent the surgery. Of the 109 infants, 14 infants who did not have frenulum alterations were included as controls. Birth order and gender were the criteria for recruiting the control group. The tongue-tied infants underwent lingual frenotomy at 45 days of age. At the conclusion of the frenotomy, the infants were breastfed. At 75 days old, both groups – control and post-frenotomy – were reassessed. Before the reassessment the same oral yes/no questions were answered by the mothers of the 14 infants who underwent frenotomy. The mothers of the control group answered the questionnaire only at the time of the first assessment. Data were subjected to statistical analysis. RESULTS: : After frenotomy, the number of sucks increased and the pause length between sucking decreased during breastfeeding. The controls maintained the same patterns observed in the first assessment. From the questionnaire answered by the mothers of the 14 tongue-tied infants, at 30 days and 75 days, we observed that the symptoms concerning breastfeeding and sucking/swallowing/breathing coordination were improved after lingual frenotomy CONCLUSIONS: : after lingual frenotomy, changes were observed in the breastfeeding patterns of the the tongue-tied infants while the control group maintained the same patterns. Moreover, all symptoms reported by the mothers of the tongue-tied infants had improved after frenotomy.
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spelling pubmed-44284592015-05-13 The effects of frenotomy on breastfeeding MARTINELLI, Roberta Lopes de Castro MARCHESAN, Irene Queiroz GUSMÃO, Reinaldo Jordão HONÓRIO, Heitor Marques BERRETIN-FELIX, Giédre J Appl Oral Sci Original Articles Although the interference of tongue-tie with breastfeeding is a controversial subject, The use of lingual frenotomy has been widely indicated by health professionals. OBJECTIVE: : To observe changes in breastfeeding patterns after lingual frenotomy concerning the number of sucks, pause length between groups of sucking and mother's complaints. MATERIAL AND METHODS: : Oral yes/no questions about breastfeeding symptoms and sucking/swallowing/breathing coordination were answered by the mothers of 109, 30 day old infants. On the same day the infants had their lingual frenulum assessed by administering a lingual frenulum protocol. After the assessment, all tongue-tied infants were referred for frenotomy; nevertheless, only 14 underwent the surgery. Of the 109 infants, 14 infants who did not have frenulum alterations were included as controls. Birth order and gender were the criteria for recruiting the control group. The tongue-tied infants underwent lingual frenotomy at 45 days of age. At the conclusion of the frenotomy, the infants were breastfed. At 75 days old, both groups – control and post-frenotomy – were reassessed. Before the reassessment the same oral yes/no questions were answered by the mothers of the 14 infants who underwent frenotomy. The mothers of the control group answered the questionnaire only at the time of the first assessment. Data were subjected to statistical analysis. RESULTS: : After frenotomy, the number of sucks increased and the pause length between sucking decreased during breastfeeding. The controls maintained the same patterns observed in the first assessment. From the questionnaire answered by the mothers of the 14 tongue-tied infants, at 30 days and 75 days, we observed that the symptoms concerning breastfeeding and sucking/swallowing/breathing coordination were improved after lingual frenotomy CONCLUSIONS: : after lingual frenotomy, changes were observed in the breastfeeding patterns of the the tongue-tied infants while the control group maintained the same patterns. Moreover, all symptoms reported by the mothers of the tongue-tied infants had improved after frenotomy. Faculdade de Odontologia de Bauru da Universidade de São Paulo 2015 /pmc/articles/PMC4428459/ /pubmed/26018306 http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1678-775720140339 Text en http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License, which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Articles
MARTINELLI, Roberta Lopes de Castro
MARCHESAN, Irene Queiroz
GUSMÃO, Reinaldo Jordão
HONÓRIO, Heitor Marques
BERRETIN-FELIX, Giédre
The effects of frenotomy on breastfeeding
title The effects of frenotomy on breastfeeding
title_full The effects of frenotomy on breastfeeding
title_fullStr The effects of frenotomy on breastfeeding
title_full_unstemmed The effects of frenotomy on breastfeeding
title_short The effects of frenotomy on breastfeeding
title_sort effects of frenotomy on breastfeeding
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4428459/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26018306
http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1678-775720140339
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