Pediatric Myofunctional Therapy
Myofunctional therapy is an exercise-based therapy used to treat muscle disorders of the face, neck, head, and mouth in children and adults. Oral myofunctional disorders can impact directly or indirectly chewing, swallowing, speech, breastfeeding, craniofacial development, dental occlusion, temporomandibular disorders, and body posture. Typically, a dentist, dental hygienist, orthodontist, or speech pathologist will recommend a myofunctional therapist to assist with the child's tongue thrust, lisp, tongue tie, snoring, sleep apnea, swallowing, chewing, open bite, mouth breathing, and other issues. A myofunctional therapist will customize a program of specific exercises to retrain the patient's face, mouth, and throat muscles. Examples of daily exercises include facial and tongue exercises, behavior modification techniques to promote proper tongue position, breathing exercises, and chewing and swallowing exercises. Both children and adults can benefit from myofunctional therapy. Oral corrections are usually retained for years after therapy is completed. Ask your doctor if myofunctional therapy would be beneficial for you or your child's eating, speaking, breathing, and sleeping issues.