Tag: Swallowing

Drooling in Toddlers

By Pam Marshalla

Q: I have a 15-months-old client with a repaired cleft palate who drools. Should I be working on the drooling issue? It is normal for a child to drool now and again until age three or so. I would not be concerned about the drooling unless the child was drooling profusely most of the time.  If she were drooling most of the time, I would look at her feeding skills. Most children who drool to excess have feeding/swallowing issues as well….

R and Orthodontia (Palatal Expander)

By Pam Marshalla

Q: Can I work on R with my client who has a palatal expander? My experience has taught me the following: Typical braces, palatal expanders, and the like should not interfere much with the sound quality of R and we can go ahead and begin treatment. However… Oral appliances can interfere with our work on R and other phonemes if there is oral pain in association with them. Wait a few weeks until the pain subsides or is managed appropriately….

The Big Picture: Articulation, Orofacial Myology, Swallowing, Motor Speech

By Pam Marshalla

Q: I have heard that we should avoid the topic of tongue-thrust therapy (orofacial myofunctional therapy). I’d like to hear your thoughts on this. In my experience, problems in articulation, orofacial myology, feeding, dysphagia, and motor speech disorders are all the same thing manifested in somewhat different ways and to various degrees. All of these therapies are about facilitating new oral movements and/or fixing incorrect oral movements. I have spent my entire career (since 1975) studying the research, clinical practices,…

Assessment of a Lisp

By Pam Marshalla

Q: I am scheduled to see a 14-year-old male with a lisp on /s/. He recently got braces and the dentist told his mother that the child had better see a speech language pathologist if the braces are to help at all. Can you help me organize this diagnosis? Focus on the speech first. You must know exactly what phonemes are affected. Look at ALL of them, not just /s/. Look at all the sibilants, and all other phonemes, especially the…

Frontal Lisp and Reverse Swallow

By Pam Marshalla

Q: Is it efficacious to work on a frontal lisp when a child has a reverse swallow, or does the swallow have to be addressed first or concurrently? In the ideal situation, the speech problem, the reverse swallow, the dentition problem (if any), and the oral habit (if any) are address all together in one plan or action. In the orofacial myofunctional literature, the recommendation generally is to work in the following order: Eliminate oral habits Establish correct oral rest…

Orofacial Myology Information

By Pam Marshalla

Q: How can I find out about orofacial myofuctional therapy? Go to the website for the International Association of Orofacial Myology. According to their website, “The IAOM provides information about Orofacial Myological disorders including: tongue thrust, improper mouth posture and incorrect swallowing patterns.”

Pacifiers and Apraxia

By Pam Marshalla

Q: Our son is 28 months old and just starting to talk. He may be apraxic and he sucks a pacifier all day and night. He seems to be very bright. What is your opinion about the pacifier? I have seen otherwise normally-developing two-year-olds who do not talk at all become completely verbal within a few weeks after their pacifier is tossed out. I always recommend elimination of the pacifier in cases of speech delay, except in those rare cases…