How Your Mouth Functions Shapes How You Breathe, Sleep, and Develop
Your mouth is designed to work in a very specific way. The tongue should rest on the roof of the mouth. Lips should stay comfortably closed. Breathing should happen primarily through the nose. Swallowing should occur without strain or compensation.
When these patterns are disrupted, the effects can show up throughout the body. Children may experience changes in facial growth and development. Adults may deal with mouth breathing, poor sleep, clenching, or chronic tension. Even if the teeth look straight, the underlying function may still be working against long-term stability.
Clues That Oral Function May Be Part of the Picture
Helping You Look Better, Feel Better, and Function Better
Common signs include:
- Mouth breathing
- Low tongue posture
- Tongue thrust swallowing
- Speech challenges
- Difficulty chewing or swallowing
- Clenching and grinding
- TMJ symptoms
- Snoring or poor sleep
- Crowding or relapse after orthodontics
- Difficulty breastfeeding in infants
- Restricted tongue movement
- Tension in the jaw, face, or neck
These signs do not always point to one specific issue, but they often indicate that oral function deserves a closer look.
Healthy Function Supports Everything Built on Top of It
The way the tongue and facial muscles function influences breathing, jaw development, and the long-term stability of treatment.
If the tongue cannot move properly, or if breathing patterns remain dysfunctional, the body may continue compensating even after orthodontic, airway, or restorative treatment.
That is why myofunctional therapy and tongue-tie evaluation are often an important part of the CHUI Method. By improving function, we help create conditions that allow treatment results to hold.
Myofunctional Therapy
Guided exercises and coaching designed to improve tongue posture, nasal breathing, swallowing, and oral muscle coordination.
Tongue-Tie Evaluation & Laser Frenectomy
A structured assessment to determine whether restricted oral tissues are affecting function, along with precise laser treatment when indicated.
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Structure Matters, but Function
Because Complex Problems Require a Coordinated Approach
Determines Whether It Lasts
The CHUI Method is built on the idea that long-term results require both form and function. Orthodontics can create space.
Airway treatment can improve breathing. TMJ care can restore stability. But if the tongue, lips, and facial muscles continue to work against those changes, the body may drift back toward the same patterns.
By addressing oral function, we help support results that are more stable over time.