Mouth breathing
A child whose default is to breathe through the mouth - day or night. Affects jaw, tongue posture, and palate development.
Mouth breathing, snoring, restless sleep, and even "wired" daytime behaviour in kids can trace back to airway and jaw development. Specialist orthodontic evaluation often catches what other settings miss.
Tell us what you need - we'll call to book at a time that works for you.
If any of these are showing up, an airway-aware orthodontic evaluation is worth the visit.
A child whose default is to breathe through the mouth - day or night. Affects jaw, tongue posture, and palate development.
Loud breathing, snoring, or pauses in breathing at night - all of which point to airway restriction.
Tossing, sweating, unusual sleep positions, or waking unrefreshed even after a full night.
A high or narrow palate, often with crowded upper teeth, is a structural sign of restricted airway space.
Sleep-disordered breathing in kids can look like inattention or ADHD-style behaviour during the day. Worth ruling in or out.
Structural tethers that change tongue posture and breathing pattern as the child grows.
Honest framing: orthodontics is one part of an airway picture, not a cure for sleep apnea.
Narrow upper jaw with palatal expansion. Jaw position with growth modification. Tooth and bite issues that worsen mouth breathing. Coordination with sleep medicine and ENT when their input is needed.
A sleep study to diagnose sleep apnea (sleep medicine). Enlarged tonsils or adenoids (ENT). Allergic causes of mouth breathing (allergist). We coordinate with these teams.
Orthodontics alone is not a cure for sleep apnea, but in many children palatal expansion and jaw guidance contribute to a meaningfully better airway. The evaluation should be coordinated with sleep medicine when sleep apnea is suspected.
Common causes are enlarged tonsils or adenoids, allergies, a narrow upper jaw, or simply a habit that started during a congested period and never changed back. The right answer depends on which one is at play.
Often yes for kids whose snoring is partly driven by a narrow upper jaw. Expansion widens both the dental arch and the nasal floor, which usually improves nighttime breathing. It is not a guaranteed cure.
Sleep-disordered breathing in children reliably causes daytime symptoms that can look like inattention, irritability, or hyperactivity - sometimes misread as ADHD. Improving sleep often improves behaviour.
The same age as a first orthodontic evaluation - around 7. Earlier is fine if mouth breathing or snoring is clearly there.
Free, no pressure - and coordinated with sleep medicine or ENT when needed.