# Lingual Frenotomy in Breastfeeding Infants: An Umbrella Review

**Authors:** Bruno Valério da Silva, Amanda Vieira Barollo, Normanda da Nóbrega Lima Sá, Luciana Butini Oliveira, Luciana Faria Sanglard

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/ipd.70031 · International Journal of Paediatric Dentistry · 2025-09-24

## TL;DR

This umbrella review finds that evidence on the effectiveness of lingual frenotomy in infants for improving breastfeeding outcomes is weak and inconclusive.

## Contribution

The study critically evaluates existing systematic reviews on lingual frenotomy in infants, highlighting methodological flaws and low-quality evidence.

## Key findings

- Most systematic reviews had critically low confidence in their findings.
- Evidence for benefits of lingual frenotomy on maternal self-efficacy and infant weight gain is inconclusive.
- Overdiagnosis of ankyloglossia may lead to unnecessary procedures without strong supporting evidence.

## Abstract

Clinical diagnosis of ankyloglossia and its therapeutic management through lingual frenotomy (LF) have increased in several countries. However, systematic reviews (SRs) and experts opinions show conflicting results on this topic.

To synthesize the available knowledge with a critical evaluation of SRs on LF in infants up to 1 year of age on breastfeeding‐related outcomes.

An umbrella review was carried out. Searches were conducted (seven electronic databases, gray literature). SRs of clinical trials involving infants up to 1 year of age undergoing LF to treat maternal self‐efficacy related to breastfeeding, nipple pain, and/or weight gain were included. The articles were critically analyzed (AMSTAR 2).

We identified 272 studies; 15 SRs were included. Confidence was classified as critically low (n = 14; 93.3%) and moderate (n = 1; 6.7%). Fourteen SRs had more than two critical aspects, indicating that the studies were not conducted properly.

The evidence on the efficacy of LF in infants remains inconclusive in relation to breastfeeding outcomes, especially maternal self‐efficacy related to breastfeeding and weight gain. Evidence of benefit for the treatment of breast pain is weak. Overdiagnosis of ankyloglossia may lead to overtreatment of the condition, without high‐quality evidence to support the benefits of this procedure.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** ankyloglossia (MONDO:0007125)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** ankyloglossia (MESH:D000072676), breast pain (MESH:D059373), weight gain (MESH:D015430), nipple pain (MESH:C000626393), LF (MESH:D046151)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

46 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12783447/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12783447