Oral surgery, oral medicine, oral pathology and oral radiology | 2019

Development of a tongue-tie case definition in newborns using a Delphi survey: the NYU-Tongue-Tie Case Definition.

 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


OBJECTIVE\nThe primary purpose of this study was to develop an operational definition of the oral condition of ankyloglossia (also called tongue-tie) that occurs in newborns (i.e., age birth-6 months) and that could consistently be used in research studies.\n\n\nSTUDY DESIGN\nThis 4-round Delphi survey developed the consensus New York University-Tongue-Tie Case Definition (NYU-TTCD) by using a panel of ankyloglossia treatment experts.\n\n\nRESULTS\nThis tongue-tie case definition (TTCD) was carefully created in a step-wise manner from the bottom up by expert panelists over 4 rounds of inquiry. As a functioning case definition, it offers the diagnostician 2 separate pathways to identifying a newborn as being tongue tied. One pathway requires but a single pathognomonic anatomic feature, and the other pathway requires a single functional deficit accompanied by at least 2 of 12 other diagnostic items (functional, anatomic, or behavioral).\n\n\nCONCLUSIONS\nThis Delphi survey, as administered to a panel of ankyloglossia treatment experts, produced the first consensus case definition of tongue-tie for newborns (i.e., age birth-6 months) for use in epidemiologic research studies ranging from descriptive prevalence studies to clinical trials. Next-step studies should establish the validity, reliability, and utility of this novel NYU-TTCD case definition for epidemiologic and clinical purposes.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1016/J.OOOO.2019.01.012
Language English
Journal Oral surgery, oral medicine, oral pathology and oral radiology

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