Tongue tie..what are the probability of it scheduled again?
My daughter was born with a 'tongue tie' no big deal, her speech is fine and she's a smart jolly toddler but I'm just wondering if I do have another child if this is something that they might be born with as powerfully?
No one in my family or her father's family have one as far as I know but..It's just that the tongue tie can make breastfeeding very difficult.
Thank you.
Maybe. No way to know. More than likely it is surrounded by your genetic some way.
My second child was tongue tied. We got it clipped when she be two months old. Easy, easy to do then. It didn't even bleed. She cried for a short time ago a second or two. But my first child isn't tongue tied. But I was (clipped when I was three days old) and my mother still is. And just just this minute we found out that my mother's uncle was tongue tied as well.
It is possible that people within your family are or were tongue tied and no one talk about it. Or it just wasn't much of an issue and they didn't even realize they were.
I am tongue tied and I hate it. I went thru years of speach therapy because they did not know I be tongue tied. I had tubes placed multiple times and had my adenoids and tonsils out in seperate surgeries. I find it tricky to believe they missed my tongue tie. One of my four children were tongue tied and she had surgery to correct it at 6 mos. Of course I can have it corrected presently but as much as I dont want to admit it I am a little scared to enjoy it done.
Most of the time it is not an issue but licking an ice cream and stuff like that which involve using your tongue. It was a bit bothersome my youthful years and kissing. Not to get too into detail but there are still a few quirks surrounded by that area due to it.
Sorry not sure what that is.
I don't suppose it's overly common. I could be wrong, but I don't think it's very credible to happen again.
Answers: My 2 year outmoded is tongue-tied as well. I've never done anything with it, and her speech is excellent. My husband is also tongue-tied, but had his clipped at 3 because of speech problems.
I asked my daughter's doctor nearly this at her last appointment, because I am going to breastfeed my son due in a few months, and wanted to know if he would be more predictable to have it as well. She said there be just no way to know for sure and that his chances might be *slightly* greater to be tongue-tied, but not by much. So, I'm not even going to worry about it.
* I also think it's unusual that it would be classified as a birth defect. People aren't all born the same. That would be similar to saying that attached earlobes or an outtie belly button was a birth defect. To me, a birth malformation is when something goes wrong while the baby is forming. That certainly doesn't apply to whether or not you can stick your tongue out impressively far, or not...LOL.
So I was of late reading about it and it says that tongue-tie is an inherited birth malfunction. Usually the mother or father or a close relative also had the condition. It sort of puzzles me because you said no one you know of has have it. I honestly don't know how much I agree with the article I just read, because I don't know much about it. But I devise your chances are 50/50 that it will happen to your second child. Here is the article I read in travel case you would like to take a look: http://children.webmd.com/tc/tongue-tie-…
EDIT: I have never hear it being called a birth defect any. I have friends whose children were born tongue tied but there be never any mention of it being a birth defect.
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No one in my family or her father's family have one as far as I know but..It's just that the tongue tie can make breastfeeding very difficult.
Thank you.
Maybe. No way to know. More than likely it is surrounded by your genetic some way.
My second child was tongue tied. We got it clipped when she be two months old. Easy, easy to do then. It didn't even bleed. She cried for a short time ago a second or two. But my first child isn't tongue tied. But I was (clipped when I was three days old) and my mother still is. And just just this minute we found out that my mother's uncle was tongue tied as well.
It is possible that people within your family are or were tongue tied and no one talk about it. Or it just wasn't much of an issue and they didn't even realize they were.
I am tongue tied and I hate it. I went thru years of speach therapy because they did not know I be tongue tied. I had tubes placed multiple times and had my adenoids and tonsils out in seperate surgeries. I find it tricky to believe they missed my tongue tie. One of my four children were tongue tied and she had surgery to correct it at 6 mos. Of course I can have it corrected presently but as much as I dont want to admit it I am a little scared to enjoy it done.
Most of the time it is not an issue but licking an ice cream and stuff like that which involve using your tongue. It was a bit bothersome my youthful years and kissing. Not to get too into detail but there are still a few quirks surrounded by that area due to it.
Sorry not sure what that is.
I don't suppose it's overly common. I could be wrong, but I don't think it's very credible to happen again.
Answers: My 2 year outmoded is tongue-tied as well. I've never done anything with it, and her speech is excellent. My husband is also tongue-tied, but had his clipped at 3 because of speech problems.
I asked my daughter's doctor nearly this at her last appointment, because I am going to breastfeed my son due in a few months, and wanted to know if he would be more predictable to have it as well. She said there be just no way to know for sure and that his chances might be *slightly* greater to be tongue-tied, but not by much. So, I'm not even going to worry about it.
* I also think it's unusual that it would be classified as a birth defect. People aren't all born the same. That would be similar to saying that attached earlobes or an outtie belly button was a birth defect. To me, a birth malformation is when something goes wrong while the baby is forming. That certainly doesn't apply to whether or not you can stick your tongue out impressively far, or not...LOL.
So I was of late reading about it and it says that tongue-tie is an inherited birth malfunction. Usually the mother or father or a close relative also had the condition. It sort of puzzles me because you said no one you know of has have it. I honestly don't know how much I agree with the article I just read, because I don't know much about it. But I devise your chances are 50/50 that it will happen to your second child. Here is the article I read in travel case you would like to take a look: http://children.webmd.com/tc/tongue-tie-…
EDIT: I have never hear it being called a birth defect any. I have friends whose children were born tongue tied but there be never any mention of it being a birth defect.
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