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Open Mouth Breathing in Children: Is Mouth Breathing Bad?

Open-mouth breathing is breathing through the mouth instead of the nose. In children, open-mouth breathing is most common at night, but it can also occur during the day.

While most of the time mouth breathing occurs because your child is sick or has allergies, it can occur due to more severe issues. If mouth breathing never resolves during childhood, your child can be at risk of developing several serious medical conditions.

Man sleeping with his mouth open

Is It Bad for Kids to Sleep with Their Mouth Open?

In most cases, mouth breathing in children usually occurs when the child suffers from congestion or allergies. This typically clears up on its own.

When children continuously breathe through their mouths, you may notice symptoms such as irritability, cracked lips, and excessive crying in younger children.

When children display frequent open-mouth breathing, it can cause numerous dental health concerns. These dental health concerns include:

  • Enlarged tonsils
  • Enlarged adenoids
  • Temporomandibular disorder of the jaw
  • Erosion of the teeth
  • Teeth grinding
  • Myofascial pain
  • Periodontal disease
  • Impacted teeth
  • Malocclusion
  • Tooth decay
  • Chronic bad breath

In addition to dental health concerns, open mouth breathing can cause other overall health issues. Your child may also experience these health concerns if they display frequent open-mouth breathing.

  • Dry mouth
  • Drowsiness during the day
  • Headaches
  • Sleep deprivation
  • Restless sleep
  • Poor ability to focus or poor memory
  • Snoring

Child mouth breathing typically occurs at night when the child is sleeping, often indicating a problem in the nasal passages.

If your child is not sick, your child must see their pediatric dentist to help resolve why your child experiences child mouth breathing at night. Children, as well as adults, usually don’t intend on open-mouth breathing. They do it unintentionally because they cannot breathe properly through their nose.

Why Is My Child Breathing Through Their Mouth?

Your child most likely experiences open-mouth breathing because there is an obstruction in their nasal passage. Some common underlying issues your child may breathe through their mouth include:

  • Deviated septum
  • Enlarged vessels, bones, or tissue in their nasal passage
  • Tongue tie

If your child is mouth breathing and does not have a blocked nasal passage, then it could be due to problems with their bite and mouth structure. The shape of your child’s jaw
May prevent them from correctly closing their mouths.

Therefore, they breathe out of the mouth because it cannot shut properly.

If your toddler sleeps with their mouth open but breathes through the nose, they do not have an issue with their mouth or bite structure. Instead, they have a blockage in the upper airway, such as their throat or nose.

How Do You Fix a Child’s Mouth Breathing?

When learning how to stop mouth breathing in a child, you should make an appointment with their pediatric dentist to be evaluated for possible orthodontia. If it is not orthodontia, your child should be evaluated for an evaluation to remove their adenoids and tonsils.

If that is not the case either, have your child evaluated for:

  • Throat or nasal obstruction
  • Allergies
  • Sinus and nasal issues
  • Tongue tie
  • Appropriate weight for their height, as an increased weight can contribute to open mouth breathing

Can Mouth Breathing Cause Behavior Problems?

Open-mouth breathing can cause behavioral problems in children, contributing to their inability to focus, irritability, and lack of sleep. Open-mouth breathing can cause problems in your child’s mental development because if they cannot properly breathe, their brain cannot function correctly.

Some common behavioral health concerns your children might experience due to mouth breathing includes:

  • Slower cognitive development
  • Difficulty concentrating and solving problems
  • Disturbed social and emotional development
  • Possibility of being diagnosed incorrectly with ADHD or ADD
  • Poor school performance

What Age Can Open Mouth Breathing Begin?

Open-mouth breathing can occur in babies as young as three to four months old, as they do not develop the reflex to breathe through their mouth until that point. If your baby or young child is mouth breathing at night, it can become a regular habit even when they are awake.

It is especially important to be aware of mouth breathing in babies since it can affect the development of their brains if left untreated.

Your child is at risk of breathing through the mouth if they suck their thumb or have prolonged use of pacifiers or if they stop breastfeeding or bottle feeding before three months of age.

How Do You Treat Mouth Breathing in Children?

Once you notice symptoms of mouth breathing in your child, make an appointment with their pediatric dentist. The pediatric dentist may need to refer your child to another professional to diagnose why they are breathing through the mouth properly. Some treatment options for mouth breathing in children include:

  • Allergy management
  • Breathing training
  • Surgery to remove enlarged tonsils, adenoids, tongue tie, or deviated septum
  • Weaning of thumb sucking
  • Orthodontic treatment to guide teeth and jaw movements

Can Mouth Breathing Affect a Toddler’s Speech?

If your child breathes through their mouth most of the time, it can affect their speech. Your child is likely to struggle with certain speech sounds or develop a lisp. If your child develops a lisp, they may have difficulty saying the letter “s” properly.

Their speech may be affected by the mouth breathing because it can cause a tongue thrust swallowing pattern. This typically occurs during late childhood, but it is due to your child breathing through their mouth for a long period of time. In severe circumstances, this can also cause trouble with swallowing and make your child more prone to choking.

Final Thoughts

Open-mouth breathing in children can be reversed, but it is essential to take steps to prevent it from happening. If you notice that your child breathes through their mouth, and they are not sick, make an appointment at The Super Dentists to help determine the cause.

Learn more about our Pediatric Dental Services at The Super Dentists. Schedule an appointment today and bring your family to a Super Dentists location near you!

Best Braces Colors: What to Consider When Making Your Choice

What are the best braces colors? That depends on a variety of factors, including your personal preferences, the season, whether you’re trying to coordinate your braces to your outfit, and more. Ultimately, no one color for braces is universally considered to be “the best”.

But what if you want help choosing? No problem! You may find it helpful to keep the following in mind when picking out the perfect shade of braces colors.

Braces Colors: A Rainbow of Possibility

Most orthodontists offer a wide range of braces colors.

The small elastic bands that hold braces brackets to archwires are offered in neutrals like white, black, gray, and brown to more zany options like neon and even glow-in-the-dark! In short, the full ROYGBIV spectrum (red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, violet) is available plus more.

While each orthodontist provides a different selection of colors, chances are if you choose traditional braces, you can pick just about any color you like at your next visit.

The exceptions to this rule are:

  • If you have clear aligners, which don’t require rubber bands at all.
  • If you have lingual braces, where the brackets are in the back so no color is seen from the front of the tooth.

Factors to Consider when Choosing Different Braces Colors

Want guidance in choosing the perfect shade of rubber bands for your braces? Here are the factors that most people keep in mind when deciding on the best color for their braces at each visit.

What Season Is It and Are There Any Upcoming Holidays or Special Occasions?

  • Winter: Consider cool colors like blue, plum, white, gray, and black.
  • Spring: Consider pastel shades like pink, sky blue, bright green, yellow, and lavender.
  • Summer: Consider bright shades like orange, neon yellow or pink, royal blue, and aqua.
  • Fall: Consider earth tones like brown, red-orange, goldenrod, olive, and cranberry.
  • Holidays: Blue and white for Hannukah, red and green for Christmas, red, pink, and white for Valentine’s Day, red, white, and blue for Independence Day, and silver and gold for New Year’s Eve are just some popular holiday color choices.

What Color Braces Are Most Popular?

Variations on the main colors of the rainbow (red, orange, yellow, green, blue, and purple) are generally the most popular.

What Are the Best Braces Color Combinations?

That depends! Some prefer monochrome looks (i.e. different shades of blue). Others prefer complimentary colors (i.e. blue and orange) for a pop. The choice is truly yours but we’re always happy to help you choose if you’re prone to decision fatigue.

What Color Braces Make Your Teeth Look Whiter?

Generally speaking, opting for braces with darker tones will make your teeth look whiter by comparison. These include shades like black, rich purple, and navy blue.

What Color Braces Look Best in Pictures?

It may be easier to notice darker colors vs. lighter colors in pictures.

Another factor to consider is the color of your skin tone, and eyes, and what colors would coordinate or contrast with those colors in photographs.

It may be helpful to analyze what “season” you are in terms of your features and choose colors accordingly.

What Color Braces Should a Girl Get vs. A Guy?

Traditionally, some colors like pink and purple have been considered more “feminine” and other colors like black and blue have been considered more “masculine”.

Today, for many people, associating certain colors with particular genders, like wearing white after Labor Day, is considered antiquated.

So choose whatever colors you like, regardless of how you identify on the gender spectrum.

Matching Your Braces to Your Personality & Preferences

  • Personality: Are you more of an extrovert? You may be drawn to brighter bolder colors that attract attention. If you’re more of an introvert, you may instead be drawn to more subdued tones and neutrals.
  • Favorite Color: If you just love the color pink, you might want to have that as your braces color. If, instead, you’re drawn to blue, that might be a good pick. For many people, the best braces colors, subjectively speaking, are their favorite colors!
  • Eye Color: People often choose the match their braces to their eye color, especially if they’re adults who are looking to turn their braces into a part of their coordinated look, helping them blend in more than stand out.
  • Mix & Match: For some folks, there’s no rhyme or reason to choosing braces colors. Feel free to mix and match colors to your heart’s delight if that’s your thing!

What to Expect with Braces & Colors

Many folks find getting braces can be uncomfortable at first. Changing your habits and routines can be unsettling, especially if you or your loved one is neurodivergent. And then of course there’s the fact that orthodontic treatment with braces does involve physically shifting your teeth which is no small feat. But rest assured: braces aren’t something to fear.

In fact, for the vast majority of people who get them, braces become just another part of their daily life in a matter of days to weeks. Due to the wide range of braces colors available and the ability to choose between them regularly at checkups, many folks even begin to look forward to visits to the orthodontist!

Like changing out a smartwatch band or choosing clothing accessories, choosing between subdued or bright-colored bands; glow-in-the-dark options, and neutrals can be extremely exciting. At The Super Dentists, we certainly work hard to make getting braces as fun and rewarding as possible for parents and kids!

If you are thinking about getting braces for yourself or your child, we invite you to schedule a braces consultation now to learn more about what to expect.