O'Shea Joyce E, Foster Jann P, O'Donnell Colm Pf, Breathnach Deirdre, Jacobs Susan E, Todd David A, Davis Peter G
Royal Hospital for Children, Glasgow, UK.
School of Nursing and Midwifery, Western Sydney University, Penrith DC, Australia.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2017 Mar 11;3(3):CD011065. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD011065.pub2.
Tongue-tie, or ankyloglossia, is a condition whereby the lingual frenulum attaches near the tip of the tongue and may be short, tight and thick. Tongue-tie is present in 4% to 11% of newborns. Tongue-tie has been cited as a cause of poor breastfeeding and maternal nipple pain. Frenotomy, which is commonly performed, may correct the restriction to tongue movement and allow more effective breastfeeding with less maternal nipple pain.
To determine whether frenotomy is safe and effective in improving ability to feed orally among infants younger than three months of age with tongue-tie (and problems feeding).Also, to perform subgroup analysis to determine the following.• Severity of tongue-tie before frenotomy as measured by a validated tool (e.g. Hazelbaker Assessment Tool for Lingual Frenulum Function (ATLFF) scores < 11; scores ≥ 11) (Hazelbaker 1993).• Gestational age at birth (< 37 weeks' gestation; 37 weeks' gestation and above).• Method of feeding (breast or bottle).• Age at frenotomy (≤ 10 days of age; > 10 days to three months of age).• Severity of feeding difficulty (infants with feeding difficulty affecting weight gain (as assessed by infant's not regaining birth weight by day 14 or falling off centiles); infants with symptomatic feeding difficulty but thriving (greater than birth weight by day 14 and tracking centiles).
We searched the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), MEDLINE, Embase and CINAHL up to January 2017, as well as previous reviews including cross-references, expert informants and journal handsearching. We searched clinical trials databases for ongoing and recently completed trials. We applied no language restrictions.
Randomised, quasi-randomised controlled trials or cluster-randomised trials that compared frenotomy versus no frenotomy or frenotomy versus sham procedure in newborn infants.
Review authors extracted from the reports of clinical trials data regarding clinical outcomes including infant feeding, maternal nipple pain, duration of breastfeeding, cessation of breastfeeding, infant pain, excessive bleeding, infection at the site of frenotomy, ulceration at the site of frenotomy, damage to the tongue and/or submandibular ducts and recurrence of tongue-tie. We used the GRADE approach to assess the quality of evidence.
Five randomised trials met our inclusion criteria (n = 302). Three studies objectively measured infant breastfeeding using standardised assessment tools. Pooled analysis of two studies (n = 155) showed no change on a 10-point feeding scale following frenotomy (mean difference (MD) -0.1, 95% confidence interval (CI) -0.6 to 0.5 units on a 10-point feeding scale). A third study (n = 58) showed objective improvement on a 12-point feeding scale (MD 3.5, 95% CI 3.1 to 4.0 units of a 12-point feeding scale). Four studies objectively assessed maternal pain. Pooled analysis of three studies (n = 212) based on a 10-point pain scale showed a reduction in maternal pain scores following frenotomy (MD -0.7, 95% CI -1.4 to -0.1 units on a 10-point pain scale). A fourth study (n = 58) also showed a reduction in pain scores on a 50-point pain scale (MD -8.6, 95% CI -9.4 to -7.8 units on a 50-point pain scale). All studies reported no adverse effects following frenotomy. These studies had serious methodological shortcomings. They included small sample sizes, and only two studies blinded both mothers and assessors; one did not attempt blinding for mothers nor for assessors. All studies offered frenotomy to controls, and most controls underwent the procedure, suggesting lack of equipoise. No study was able to report whether frenotomy led to long-term successful breastfeeding.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Frenotomy reduced breastfeeding mothers' nipple pain in the short term. Investigators did not find a consistent positive effect on infant breastfeeding. Researchers reported no serious complications, but the total number of infants studied was small. The small number of trials along with methodological shortcomings limits the certainty of these findings. Further randomised controlled trials of high methodological quality are necessary to determine the effects of frenotomy.
舌系带过短,即舌粘连,是一种舌系带附着于舌尖附近且可能短、紧、厚的病症。4%至11%的新生儿存在舌系带过短。舌系带过短被认为是母乳喂养不佳及产妇乳头疼痛的一个原因。通常实施的舌系带切开术可能会纠正对舌头运动的限制,并使母乳喂养更有效,同时减轻产妇乳头疼痛。
确定舌系带切开术对于3个月以下患有舌系带过短(及喂养问题)的婴儿改善经口喂养能力是否安全有效。此外,进行亚组分析以确定以下内容。• 舌系带切开术前通过有效工具测量的舌系带过短严重程度(例如,舌系带功能的黑兹尔贝克评估工具(ATLFF)评分<11;评分≥11)(黑兹尔贝克,1993年)。• 出生时的胎龄(<37周妊娠;37周及以上妊娠)。• 喂养方式(母乳喂养或奶瓶喂养)。• 进行舌系带切开术时的年龄(≤10日龄;>10日龄至3个月龄)。• 喂养困难的严重程度(喂养困难影响体重增加的婴儿(通过婴儿在第14天未恢复出生体重或生长曲线下降评估);有症状性喂养困难但生长良好的婴儿(第14天体重超过出生体重且生长曲线正常))。
我们检索了截至2017年1月的Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL)、MEDLINE、Embase和CINAHL,以及之前的综述,包括交叉引用、专家提供的信息和期刊手工检索。我们检索了临床试验数据库以查找正在进行和最近完成的试验。我们未设语言限制。
比较舌系带切开术与未行舌系带切开术或舌系带切开术与假手术的新生儿随机、半随机对照试验或整群随机试验。
综述作者从临床试验报告中提取有关临床结局的数据,包括婴儿喂养、产妇乳头疼痛、母乳喂养持续时间、停止母乳喂养、婴儿疼痛、出血过多、舌系带切开术部位感染、舌系带切开术部位溃疡、舌头和/或下颌下导管损伤以及舌系带过短复发。我们采用GRADE方法评估证据质量。
五项随机试验符合我们的纳入标准(n = 302)。三项研究使用标准化评估工具客观测量了婴儿母乳喂养情况。两项研究(n = 155)的汇总分析显示,舌系带切开术后10分制喂养量表上无变化(平均差(MD)-0.1,10分制喂养量表上95%置信区间(CI)为-0.6至0.5单位)。第三项研究(n = 58)显示12分制喂养量表上有客观改善(MD 3.5,12分制喂养量表上95%CI为3.1至4.0单位)。四项研究客观评估了产妇疼痛。基于10分制疼痛量表的三项研究(n = 212)的汇总分析显示,舌系带切开术后产妇疼痛评分降低(MD -0.7,10分制疼痛量表上95%CI为-1.4至-0.1单位)。第四项研究(n = 58)也显示50分制疼痛量表上疼痛评分降低(MD -8.6,50分制疼痛量表上95%CI为-9.4至-7.8单位)。所有研究均报告舌系带切开术后无不良反应。这些研究存在严重的方法学缺陷。它们样本量小,只有两项研究对母亲和评估者均采用了盲法;一项研究既未对母亲也未对评估者尝试采用盲法。所有研究都为对照组提供了舌系带切开术,且大多数对照组都接受了该手术,这表明缺乏均衡性。没有研究能够报告舌系带切开术是否导致长期成功母乳喂养。
舌系带切开术在短期内减轻了母乳喂养母亲的乳头疼痛。研究人员未发现对婴儿母乳喂养有一致的积极影响。研究人员报告无严重并发症,但研究的婴儿总数较少。试验数量少以及方法学缺陷限制了这些发现的确定性。需要进一步开展高质量的随机对照试验来确定舌系带切开术的效果。