Summer 2005: Stopping the Stuffing
We
recently had a 2-year-old visit from Iowa, a real cutie, but boy, was he ever a
“mouth stuffer.” If you’re the parent of a child with fragile X syndrome, you’re
probably very familiar with mouth stuffing, a common issue we frequently are
asked about. Mouse can stuff as well—just give her a bag of Chex Mix or Famous
Amos cookies and watch her go!
Mouth stuffing, by Mouse or anyone else,
is an overfilling of the mouth with the selected food. For kids with FXS, it is
usually an adaptive means of trying to succeed with eating. More on that
later…
Mouth stuffing is a symptom of other oral motor issues that need
to be addressed by your occupational therapist, speech therapist, oral facial
myologist, or sometimes two or three of these professionals working in concert.
We can hear you asking: “Three professionals working on the same problem?” Yes,
in some regions of the U.S., speech therapists provide more of the oral motor
therapy; in other places, the occupational therapist may provide this service.
Oral facial myologists are the less-known experts. An oral facial myologist is a
certified therapist who specializes in the precise alignment and function of the
muscles of the face and mouth, utilizing specific home program-based exercises
to strengthen muscles and improve oral motor function. The oral facial myologist
can provide expert programming for motor-based difficulties, but may not
understand the subtleties of the sensory aspects of mouth stuffing, especially
in children with fragile X syndrome.
So why do these kids tend to
overfill their mouths? Because it simply tastes so good? Not
likely!
Remember that children with FXS are plagued by low muscle tone
and poor oral sensory awareness, as well as poor oral-sensory-motor control of
the fine movements of their mouth. What a package of problems to try to manage,
and how smart of these kids to figure out that if they fill up the space, the
work is easier and they receive more feedback, which will lead to success given
the diminished motor and sensory skills they have to work with.
Let’s
get back to that 2-year-old. We pulled out our favorite trick (once Tracy got it
away from Mouse, anyway): Pop Rocks! You know—that fizzy, bubbly candy that goes
POP! in a kid’s mouth as soon as it gets wet. What a success!
Your first
thought when you think about Pop Rocks might be, “Are you serious—put something
that “overstimulating” in a toddler’s mouth? These gals really are nuts!
Contrary to intuition, Pop Rocks may be the “just right” input to wake up that
mouth and get those muscles activated. (Note: your intuition that we are a bit
nuts may still be on target.)
For our visiting 2-year-old, we saw an
immediate change in oral awareness—which resulted in a corresponding increase in
oral movements (both quality and quantity) —as he explored the Pop Rocks with
his tongue, cheek and lips. All this with only four little Pop Rocks!
So, is the use of Pop Rocks going to solve all mouth stuffing issues?
No. A well-considered program of oral motor play, oral sensory diet, and visual
supports to manage oral portions is more the ticket. So here are some
suggestions for you and your therapists to follow through on such a program.
This is a limited list of things we have found particularly useful, but there
are also some wonderful resources in OT and speech therapy
catalogues.
Oral Motor Play
-Play puppy dog by having your
child bite on a frozen, wet wash rag as you try to tug it away from him as he
clenches it
-Provide your child with a variety of “chew toys” that
provide resistance in the mouth.
-Include sucking and blowing at meals
with different sized straws. (Mouse loves those funky fat straws from the Asian
Tapioca Tea House. Tracy is inclined to the twisty straw.)
-Bubbles,
bubbles, bubbles, and not just the kind in the little 99-cent bottle. Blow
bubbles while in the bathtub, blow in a bowl of milk or pudding (not a cup; we
don’t want to teach a behavior we have to undo). Just blow.
Oral
Sensory Diet
-We have found use of the Wilbarger oral pressure
protocol to be incredibly valuable for most kids exhibiting mouth stuffing. This
is interesting, considering that the method was devised as a treatment for oral
hypersensitivity (oral defensiveness). You have to have direct training from a
therapist trained in the Wilbarger techniques to know how to use this strategy –
we can’t teach it to you in this forum, but ask your therapist about
it.
-Include crunchy and chewy-resistive foods at each meal and snack.
The frequency of oral sensory input—scheduled not just once or on occasion but
about 6-8 times each day—is the key to this technique.
Visual Supports
-Put only a single bite-size portion of the foods most commonly
overstuffed in front of the child until that portion size is learned, then
gradually increase.
-Use a template on the plate showing the bite-sized
portion (a laminated photo?) or have this on a card in front of the child next
to her plate to visually cue her on the right amount.
-Model, model,
model—have the whole family talk about and physically demonstrate what portions
are best for different (especially new) foods.
As for us, we plan to
continue to stuff ourselves silly at every opportunity!
