Chinnadurai Sivakumar, Francis David O, Epstein Richard A, Morad Anna, Kohanim Sahar, McPheeters Melissa
Department of Otolaryngology, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee; and.
Department of Otolaryngology, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee; and Center for Surgical Quality and Outcomes Research.
Pediatrics. 2015 Jun;135(6):e1467-74. doi: 10.1542/peds.2015-0660. Epub 2015 May 4.
Children with ankyloglossia, an abnormally short, thickened, or tight lingual frenulum, may have restricted tongue mobility and sequelae, such as speech and feeding difficulties and social concerns. We systematically reviewed literature on feeding, speech, and social outcomes of treatments for infants and children with ankyloglossia.
Medline, PsycINFO, Cumulative Index of Nursing and Allied Health Literature, and Embase were searched. Two reviewers independently assessed studies against predetermined inclusion/exclusion criteria. Two investigators independently extracted data on study populations, interventions, and outcomes and assessed study quality.
Two randomized controlled trials, 2 cohort studies, and 11 case series assessed the effects of frenotomy on feeding, speech, and social outcomes. Bottle feeding and social concerns, such as ability to use the tongue to eat ice cream and clean the mouth, improved more in treatment groups in comparative studies. Supplementary bottle feedings decreased over time in case series. Two cohort studies reported improvement in articulation and intelligibility with treatment. Other benefits were unclear. One randomized controlled trial reported improved articulation after Z-frenuloplasty compared with horizontal-to-vertical frenuloplasty. Numerous noncomparative studies reported speech benefits posttreatment; however, studies primarily discussed modalities, with outcomes including safety or feasibility, rather than speech. We included English-language studies, and few studies addressed longer-term speech, social, or feeding outcomes; nonsurgical approaches, such as complementary and alternative medicine; and outcomes beyond infancy, when speech or social concerns may arise.
Data are currently insufficient for assessing the effects of frenotomy on nonbreastfeeding outcomes that may be associated with ankyloglossia.
患有舌系带过短(舌系带异常短、增厚或紧绷)的儿童可能存在舌头活动受限及相关后遗症,如言语和进食困难以及社交问题。我们系统回顾了关于舌系带过短的婴幼儿及儿童治疗的喂养、言语和社交结局的文献。
检索了医学期刊数据库(Medline)、心理学文摘数据库(PsycINFO)、护理及相关健康文献累积索引数据库(Cumulative Index of Nursing and Allied Health Literature)和荷兰医学文摘数据库(Embase)。两名 reviewers 依据预先设定的纳入/排除标准独立评估研究。两名研究者独立提取关于研究人群、干预措施和结局的数据,并评估研究质量。
两项随机对照试验、两项队列研究和 11 个病例系列评估了舌系带切开术对喂养、言语和社交结局的影响。在比较研究中,治疗组的奶瓶喂养以及社交问题(如用舌头吃冰淇淋和清洁口腔的能力)改善更为明显。病例系列中,随着时间推移,补充奶瓶喂养次数减少。两项队列研究报告称治疗后发音和清晰度有所改善。其他益处尚不清楚。一项随机对照试验报告称,与水平至垂直舌系带切开术相比,Z 形舌系带成形术后发音改善。众多非对照研究报告了治疗后言语方面的益处;然而,研究主要讨论的是治疗方式,结局包括安全性或可行性,而非言语。我们纳入了英文研究,很少有研究涉及长期的言语(speech)、社交或喂养结局;非手术方法,如补充和替代医学;以及婴儿期之后可能出现言语或社交问题时的结局。
目前的数据不足以评估舌系带切开术对可能与舌系带过短相关的非母乳喂养结局的影响。