29. Jan, 2021
First things first: take a long, deep breath. This can feel overwhelming, whether feeding has been challenging or if you felt you were breastfeeding well, but someone mentioned this and now you’re concerned. You're doing brilliantly by seeking clarity and support. Let’s walk through this step by step.
1. Who told you your baby has a tongue-tie?
Only a trained tongue-tie practitioner can officially diagnose a tongue-tie. Why? Because they are qualified to carry out a comprehensive oral assessment. However, many skilled and experienced lactation consultants and breastfeeding specialists will raise suspicion when examining your baby and supporting the feeding.
This goes well beyond simply looking in your baby’s mouth or offering a finger to suck. A proper assessment will evaluate:
A breastfeeding/ lactation specialist or IBCLC lactation consultant may suspect a tongue-tie if feeding issues are present and refer you for further assessment.
However, this is only one piece of the whole puzzle. If you’ve been told your baby has a tongue-tie but there aren’t any breastfeeding issues and your baby is gaining weight, all good! Some babies can breastfeed even with a tongue-tie.
Every baby can benefit from a holistic breastfeeding assessment, but for those with suspected tongue-ties, it is even more crucial.
2. What is a tongue-tie?
Tongue-tie (or ankyloglossia) occurs when the thin strip of tissue under the tongue (the frenulum) is shorter or tighter than usual, limiting movement.
“Some babies who appear to have a tongue-tie don’t have any feeding problems, while others with no visible restriction may struggle a lot.”
– NHS Start for Life
The presence of a frenulum is not the same as a tongue-tie – this is why just looking is not enough.
3. Let’s look at the whole picture
Before jumping to conclusions or rushing into procedures, it’s important to ask:
Sometimes, what looks like a tongue-tie is actually related to muscle tensions, birth strain, or other factors.
4. Is your baby latching or not latching?Your baby is latching – but it’s painful or ineffective?
Not all tongue-tied babies struggle to latch. Some may breastfeed well, gain weight, and be pain-free. Others may feed often but not transfer milk efficiently.
Protecting your milk supply is essential. Here's how:
Be cautious with nipple shields: while sometimes suggested, they still require a deep, wide latch – something many babies with restricted tongue movement struggle to achieve. In some cases, shields can reinforce a shallow latch, worsen pain and impact the breastfeeding rather than protecting it.
Your baby is not latching?
You are doing an incredible job by responding quickly and seeking help.
To protect your supply and support feeding:
A quick note on positioning: hands off the neck!
Yes – I know. Everyone so far has probably told you to support your baby by the neck to latch. But this often makes things worse.
Why?
Try these gentle alternatives:
5. The tongue-tie was confirmed – now what?
If your baby is under 6 weeks and gaining weight:
6. Do you need a frenotomy (tongue-tie release)?
Not necessarily – and not immediately.
A tongue-tie is only part of the picture. Babies with a tight frenulum often carry body tension from birth, which can affect feeding.
Before considering a release, try:
“Complications and misdiagnoses are occurring after infant frenotomy. Physicians and dentists should work closely with lactation professionals to evaluate other confounding problems... before referral.”
– International Breastfeeding Journal, 2022
7. What if it’s not a tongue-tie? What else could be going on?
Many feeding difficulties are caused by tension, not tongue-tie.
Your baby has muscles, joints, and a skeletal system too – and birth can be a big physical journey.
Common scenarios that can mimic tongue-tie symptoms:
8. Micrognathia (small jaw) and breastfeeding
Micrognathia, a smaller-than-usual lower jaw, can interfere with feeding due to limited mouth space and tongue function:
Support strategies include:
9. Epidural analgesia and early oral skills
Recent evidence shows that epidurals can influence infant feeding and oral reflexes:
Despite these findings, some studies (mostly retrospective) show no major impact on breastfeeding if early support is provided sciencedirect.com+7reddit.com+7reddit.com+7. But the strongest evidence supports:
Final thoughts
A suspected tongue-tie can be confusing and emotionally charged – especially when feeding isn’t going to plan. But a careful, holistic approach – one that includes skilled breastfeeding support, bodywork, and patience – can make a world of difference.
If in doubt, don’t navigate it alone. A qualified lactation/ breastfeeding consultant, infant feeding specialist, or tongue-tie practitioner can guide you. You're not failing. You're learning alongside your baby – and that is more than enough.
To book a session with one of our team’s infants feeding specialist, please contact
number 07916152217
email stephanie@holisticbabies.co.uk
www. holisticbabiesouthlondon.com