The Faculty of Health and Applied Sciences (HAS), University of the West of England, Bristol, United Kingdom,
Bristol Speech and Language Therapy Research Unit, North Bristol NHS Trust UK and University of Bristol, Bristol, United Kingdom.
Folia Phoniatr Logop. 2021;73(2):75-88. doi: 10.1159/000505266. Epub 2020 Feb 10.
Children with and without speech sound disorders (SSDs) are exposed to different patterns of infant feeding (breast/bottle-feeding) and may or may not engage in non-nutritive sucking (NNS) (pacifier/digit-sucking). Sucking and speech use similar oral musculature and structures, therefore it is possible that early sucking patterns may impact early speech sound development. The objective of this review is to synthesise the current evidence on the influence of feeding and NNS on the speech sound development of healthy full-term children.
Electronic databases (PubMed, NHS CRD, EMBASE, MEDLINE) were searched using terms specific to feeding, NNS and speech sound development. All methodologies were considered. Studies were assessed for inclusion and quality by 2 reviewers. Of 1,031 initial results, 751 records were screened, and 5 primary studies were assessed for eligibility, 4 of which were included in the review. Evidence from the available literature on the relationship between feeding, NNS and speech sound development was inconsistent and inconclusive. An association between NNS duration and SSDs was the most consistent finding, reported by 3 of the 4 studies. Quality appraisal was carried out using the Appraisal Tool for Cross-Sectional Studies (AXIS). The included studies were found to be of moderate quality. Key Messages: This review found there is currently limited evidence on the relationship between feeding, NNS and speech sound development. Exploring this unclear relationship is important because of the overlapping physical mechanisms for feeding, NNS and speech production, and therefore the possibility that feeding and/or sucking behaviours may have the potential to impact on speech sound development. Further high-quality research into specific types of SSD using coherent clinically relevant assessment measures is needed to clarify the nature of the association between feeding, NNS and speech sound development, in order to inform and support families and health care professionals.
患有和不患有言语语音障碍(SSD)的儿童接触不同的婴儿喂养方式(母乳喂养/奶瓶喂养),并且可能进行或不进行非营养性吸吮(NNS)(安抚奶嘴/手指吸吮)。吸吮和言语使用相似的口腔肌肉和结构,因此早期的吸吮模式可能会影响早期言语语音的发展。本综述的目的是综合目前关于喂养和 NNS 对健康足月儿童言语语音发展影响的证据。
使用特定于喂养、NNS 和言语语音发展的术语,对电子数据库(PubMed、NHS CRD、EMBASE、MEDLINE)进行了搜索。考虑了所有方法学。由 2 位审查员评估纳入和质量。在 1031 项初始结果中,筛选了 751 条记录,有 5 项主要研究被评估为符合条件,其中 4 项被纳入综述。现有文献中关于喂养、NNS 和言语语音发展之间关系的证据不一致且没有定论。NNS 持续时间与 SSD 之间的关联是最一致的发现,4 项研究中有 3 项报告了这一发现。使用横断面研究评估工具(AXIS)进行了质量评估。纳入的研究被认为质量中等。关键信息:本综述发现,目前关于喂养、NNS 和言语语音发展之间关系的证据有限。探索这种不明确的关系很重要,因为喂养、NNS 和言语产生有重叠的物理机制,因此喂养和/或吸吮行为有可能影响言语语音发展。需要进一步使用一致的、具有临床相关性的评估措施对特定类型的 SSD 进行高质量研究,以阐明喂养、NNS 和言语语音发展之间关联的性质,以便为家庭和医疗保健专业人员提供信息和支持。