Tethered Oral Tissues (TOTs), or oral restrictions such as tongue tie, are congenital abnormalities in which the oral frenulae are too tight, too short, too thick or sit in an atypical location. TOTs are one form of Orofacial Myofunctional Disorders (OMDs), and cause atypical, adaptive patterns that may impact airway, sleep, feeding, speech, feeding and swallowing.
Recent research by Diercks et al. (2020) and Hill (2024) point out that not all identified oral restrictions are the sole cause for infant feeding difficulties and the media has scrutinized the evidence and efficacy behind an increase in frenectomies. The first part of this class will review the literature and analyze the current state of why we are seeing an increase in frenectomies and what research is available to support or negate surgery.
After research is explored, Robyn will discuss her parent-friendly “release readiness” protocol that discusses important factors in determining when patients have the sensory-motor and self-regulation factors to successfully undergo frenectomy or frenotomy. Although ASHA (n.d.) stated speech-language language pathologists do not determine surgery, they are often the key professionals in determining functional implications, medical necessity and release readiness by measuring how the patient responds to pre-operative interventions. Other licensed allied health professionals such as bodyworkers (ex. Physical and occupational therapists), also play an important role in ensuring a patient is ready to maximize the treatment outcomes from frenectomy/frenotomy/frenuloplasty.
Release readiness is based on age and cognitive status of the patient, medical stability, parent/caregiver training and response to intervention. Discussions on sensory processing and regulation, caregiver training goal establishment and service delivery models will be discussed.
This course is a part of Robyn’s MYOTools series and can be taken in conjunction with any of these MYOTools courses and /or TOTs courses offered by TalkTools®. The course is appropriate for parents, caregivers and all professionals on the TOTs care team.
Event Information
Course Description
Recent research by Diercks et al. (2020) and Hill (2024) point out that not all identified oral restrictions are the sole cause for infant feeding difficulties and the media has scrutinized the evidence and efficacy behind an increase in frenectomies. The first part of this class will review the literature and analyze the current state of why we are seeing an increase in frenectomies and what research is available to support or negate surgery.
After research is explored, Robyn will discuss her parent-friendly “release readiness” protocol that discusses important factors in determining when patients have the sensory-motor and self-regulation factors to successfully undergo frenectomy or frenotomy. Although ASHA (n.d.) stated speech-language language pathologists do not determine surgery, they are often the key professionals in determining functional implications, medical necessity and release readiness by measuring how the patient responds to pre-operative interventions. Other licensed allied health professionals such as bodyworkers (ex. Physical and occupational therapists), also play an important role in ensuring a patient is ready to maximize the treatment outcomes from frenectomy/frenotomy/frenuloplasty.
Release readiness is based on age and cognitive status of the patient, medical stability, parent/caregiver training and response to intervention. Discussions on sensory processing and regulation, caregiver training goal establishment and service delivery models will be discussed.
This course is a part of Robyn’s MYOTools series and can be taken in conjunction with any of these MYOTools courses and /or TOTs courses offered by TalkTools®. The course is appropriate for parents, caregivers and all professionals on the TOTs care team.
Learning Outcomes
List 3 factors that indicate readiness for a frenectomy.
- State which professional ultimately determines the necessity for a release.
- List one way to avoid oral sensory aversion post release.
Self-Study Details
- Robyn Merkel-Walsh MA, CCC-SLP/COM®
Registration
- Online ONLY for 1 learner -- ACCESS TO ONLINE COURSE FOR 365 DAYS/1 YEAR (2-hour CE course, downloadable handout)
Schedule
Timed Agenda
5 min: Introduction
15 min: TOTs Overview:
- Defining TOTs
- TOTs intervention- Functional/Therapy
- TOTs intervention-Structural/Surgery
30 min: Current Evidence and Efficacy:
- Research data
- Public concerns
60 min: Release Readiness
Sensory regulation
- Understanding and Executing Oral Motor or Orofacial Myofunctional
- Defined and Reviewed Goals
- Acceptance of Therapy Tools
- Collaboration Between Professionals
- Evident Progress in Therapy
- Reduced Fascial Tightness
- Consistent Attendance
- Accurate Demonstration of Exercises
- Tolerance of a Bite Block
- Acceptance of Vibration
- Secured Post-Procedure Therapy Visits
10 min: Conclusions / Q&A
CEUs

Content Disclosure: This presentation will focus on treatment methods related to the use of TalkTools® resources. Other similar treatment approaches will receive limited or no coverage during this lecture.
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