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Summer 2006: Volume
30, Number 4 |
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| Clinical Articles |
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An atypical Lingual Lesion
Resulting from the Unhealthy Habit of Sucking the Lower Lip:
Clinical Case Study
Elena Barbería MD, DMD, PhD, DDS / Tania Lucavechi DMD,
LDS / Dora Cárdenas DMD, LDS / Myriam Maroto DMD, LDS,
PhD
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Unhealthy oral habits may be involved in
the etiology of a malocclusion, since they may affect development
of the orofacial region. There is little information on the habit
of sucking the lower lip, to which practitioners attribute less
clinical consequences. However, lower lip sucking is a harmful
habit which appears frequently in children, especially during
situations requiring increased attention and mental concentration.
In patients presenting lower lip sucking, strong contractions
of the lower lip’s orbicular’s muscle and the mentalis
muscle, associated with hypertonicity of the upper lip caused
by sucking, has to be balanced by lingual thrusting during the
act of deglutition. A case is presented in which failure to identify
the habit of lower lip sucking led to an atypical lesion on the
tongue, caused by the tongue’s impaction against the orthodontic
appliance prescribed to correct a malocclusion. The recognition
and elimination of an unhealthy habit is of great importance in
diagnosis and the establishment of a treatment plan, so that undesirable
complications can be avoided. |
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