Logo - The Possums baby and toddler sleep program.
parents home
librarybrowse all programsfind answers nowaudioprograms in audiogroup sessionsgroup sessions with dr pam
menu icon NDC Institute
possums for professionals
(the ndc institute)
menu icon eventsguest speakers
menu icon the sciencethe science behind possums/ndcmenu icon who we arewho we aremenu icon evidence basendc research publicationsmenu icon dr pam's booksdr pam's books
menu icon free resourcesfree resourcesmenu icon dr pam's blogdr pam's blog
menu icon consult with dr pamconsult with dr pammenu icon consult with dr pamfind a possums clinicmenu icon find a NDC accredited practitionerfind an ndc accredited practitioner
login-iconlogin

Welcome back!

Forgot password
get access
search

Search programs

PBL Foundations icon

PBL Foundations


  • What causes nipple pain when you're breastfeeding or lactating and there's no visible break in the skin (though there may be redness and swelling)?
  • What causes visible nipple damage (cracks, ulcers, bruising, or other wounds) when you're breastfeeding or lactating?
  • Your baby's tongue doesn't cause friction, pinching, or compression during breastfeeding
  • Does your baby have tongue-tie or other oral connective tissue or fascial restrictions resulting in breastfeeding problems?
  • Is nipple pain and damage caused by your nipple height or your breast anatomy?
  • Is your nipple pain explained by high vacuums in your baby's mouth?
  • Do teats and pacifiers affect baby's suck and cause nipple pain?
  • Does thrush infection cause breast or nipple pain when you're breastfeeding?
  • What are the most common causes of nipple pain and damage when you're breastfeeding an older baby or child (with a word about teeth)?

Next article

Sign up now
  • PBL Foundations
  • S7: Nipple pain and damage
  • CH 3: What causes nipple pain and damage?

Does your baby have tongue-tie or other oral connective tissue or fascial restrictions resulting in breastfeeding problems?

Dr Pamela Douglas16th of Oct 202410th of Dec 2025

x

True tongue-tie (or ankyloglossia) sometimes causes breastfeeding problems but is not that common

Does your baby really have tongue-tie, posterior tongue-tie, lip-tie, buccal ties, or fascial restrictions which are causing breastfeeding problems? How can you sort this out when there's so much conflicting advice on this topic? What does the science actually tell us? What are the limitations to this science?

We definitely don't want to miss diagnosing and treating a classic tongue-tie in your baby. You can find out about tongue-tie, infant fascial restrictions, and other oral connective tissue restrictions in section of Possums Breastfeeding & Lactation which deals with this topic, starting here.

The research gives us wildly variable estimates of how many babies have tongue-tie because there is no clear definition

The true rate of tongue-tie is difficult to know, because there is no agreement in the research about how to define tongue-tie. Estimates range from 1.7% to 10.7% of babies, or even more.

Certainly at the moment, there are no reliable diagnostic screening tools for ankyloglossia, despite what you might hear - and worse, screening tools are often being wrongly used as diagnostic tools. As I write, none of the screening tools in use are based on accurate understandings of the biomechanics of infant suck and swallow in breastfeeding.

Tongue-tie is overdiagnosed and overtreated in babies

Tongue-tie and fascial restrictions are currently overdiagnosed and overtreated in breastfeeding babies in advanced economies. Sometimes you might read that rates of tongue-tie diagnosis and treatment have only increased because breastfeeding rates have increased, or because we are better at diagnosing it. You'll specially hear this said by health professionals who have a special interest in treating ankylofrenula.

This claim is not accurate. The research clearly demonstrates an exponential increase in numbers of infant frenotomies performed in various countries in recent years, which is consistent (applying the science of epidemiology) with overdiagnosis and overtreatment.

In bringing you Possums Breastfeeding & Lactation, I hope to help you avoid inaccurate diagnoses of tongue-tie and oral connective tissue or fascial restrictions, without missing a classic or true tongue-tie, and to help you avoid unnecessary expense and worry. I also hope to help protect your baby from the unnecessary side-effects of treatments - which can sometimes be severe, or even on rare occasions life-threatening.

  • You can find out about possible side-effects of frenotomy, and why laser risks more side-effects than scissors, here.

  • You can find out what drives overdiagnosis and overtreatment of tongue-tie and oral connective tissue restrictions here.

  • You can find the help of an NDC Accredited Practitioner here.

It's not possible to tell if the baby in the photograph at the top of this page would benefit from a frenotomy, because a single image can be quite misleading. We can certainly see a prominent opaque anterior membrane, which would be easy to snip. The baby's tight lips don't tell us anything - other than at the moment of the photograph, this little one is somewhat dialled up and pulling in his lips defensively. He is holding his upper lip in tight at the moment the photo was taken. But this doesn't mean that his orbicularis oris muscles have developed abnormal or stressed or tight functional patterns, or that the behaviour of his lips is linked with the frenulum. A full assessment is required, including of breastfeeding (or, if relevant, bottle feeding). Infant oromotor function is contextual.

Recommended resources

Your baby's tongue doesn't cause friction, pinching, or compression during breastfeeding

Does your baby have a classic tongue-tie (or true ankyloglossia)?

Does your baby have a posterior tongue-tie?

Does your baby have an upper lip-tie or buccal ties?

Is your baby's torticollis causing tongue or other fascial restrictions which interfere with breastfeeding?

Selected references

Borowitz SM. What is tongue-tie and does it interfere with breast-feeding? - a brief review. Frontiers in Pediatrics. 2023;11:1086942.

Delgadillo GJ, Rojoas JZ, Munozl MA, Luque-Martinez I. Frenotomy for ankyloglossia in children under five: a systematic review and metanalysis on breastfeeding outcomes. International Breastfeeding Journal. 2025;20(81):https://doi.org/10.1186/s13006-13025-00773-x.

Dinha LA, El-Rabbany M, Aslam S, Ricalde P. Does lingual frenotomy improve breastfeeding in newborns with ankyloglossia? A randomized controlled trial. Journal of Oral and Maxilliofacial Surgery. 2025:DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.joms.2025.1004.1006.

Dixon B, Gray J, Elliot N, Shand B, Lynn A. A multifaceted programme to reduce the rate of tongue-tie release surgery in newborn infants: observational study. international Journal of Pediatric Otorhinolaryngology. 2018;113:156-163.

Ellehauge E, Schmidt Jensen J, Gronhoj C, Hjuler T. Trends of ankyloglossia and lingual frenotomy in hospital settings among children in Denmark. Danish Medical Journal. 2020;67(5):A01200051.

Fraser L, Benzie S, Montgomery J. Posterior tongue tie and lip tie: a lucrative private industry where the evidence is uncertain. BMJ. 2020;371:m3928.

Hill R, R, Lee CS, Pados BF. The prevalence of ankyloglossia in children aged < 1 year: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Pediatric Research. 2021;90(2):259-266.

Joseph KS, Kinniburg B, Metcalfe A, Raza N, Sabr Y, Lisonkova S. Temporal trends in ankyloglossia and frenotomy in British Columbia, Canada, 2004-2013: a population-based study. CMAJ Open. 2016;4:e33-e40

Kapoor V, Douglas PS, Hill PS, Walsh L, Tennant M. Frenotomy for tongue-tie in Australian children (2006-2016): an increasing problem. MJA. 2018;208(2):88-89.

Larrain M, Stevenson EGJ. Controversy over tongue-tie: divisions in the community of healthcare professionals. Medical Anthropology. 2022:DOI:10.1080/01459740.01452022.02056843.

Lisonek M, Shiliang L, Dzakpasu S, Moore AM, Joseph KS. Changes in the incidence and surgical treatment of ankyloglossia in Canada. Paedaitrics and Child Health. 2017;22(7):382-386.

Walsh J, Links A, Boss E, Tunkel D. Ankyloglossia and lingual frenotomy: national trends in inpatient diagnosis and management in the United States, 1997-2012. Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery. 2017;156(4):735-740.

Wei E, Tunkel D, Boss E, Walsh J. Ankyloglossia: update on trends in diagnosis and management in the United States, 2012-2016. Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery. 2020:https://doi.org/10.1177%1172F0194599820925415.

Finished

share this article

Next up in What causes nipple pain and damage?

Is nipple pain and damage caused by your nipple height or your breast anatomy?

x

Many different elements of your and your baby's anatomy interact together in breastfeeding

You and your baby are a biological system, with myriad different elements of the system interacting together during breastfeeding. Anatomic variations are just one part of the picture. If there's one thing that characterises both mother and baby anatomies in breastfeeding, it's just how variable we are as humans!

It seems to me that the current tendency to pathologise anatomic diversity and blame either the mother's or baby’s anatomy for breastfeeding problems has come about because our health systems lack effective clinical approaches which stabilise baby at the breast across the whole range of glorious anatomic…

Keep reading
logo‑possums

Possums in your inbox

Evidence-based insights, tips, and tools. Occasional updates.

For parents

parents homebrowse all programsfind answers nowprograms in audiogroup sessions with dr pam

For professionals

possums for professionals
(the ndc institute)
guest speakers

About

the science behind possums/ndcwho we arendc research publicationsdr pam’s books

More resources

free resourcesdr pam’s blog

Clinical consultation

consult with dr pamfind a possums clinicfind an ndc accredited practitioner

Help & support

contact usfaqour social enterpriseprivacy policyterms & conditions

Social

instagramlinked infacebook

Possums acknowledges the traditional owners of the lands upon which The Possums Programs have been created, the Yuggera and Turrbal Peoples. We acknowledge that First Nations have breastfed, slept with, and lovingly raised their children on Australian lands for at least 65,000 years, to become the oldest continuous living culture on Earth. Possums stands with the Uluru Statement from the Heart.