Tongue-Tie and Feeding:

Why Lactation and Cranial Chiropractic Work Better Together

Co-authored by Alicea Sabella, IBCLC (Flourish Feeding Babies, Middletown NJ) and Dr. Anthony Pellegrino, DC, DACCP — one of nine Certified Pediatric Craniopaths worldwide (Absolute Chiropractic, Sea Girt NJ)

Tongue-tie and feeding difficulties are rarely one-dimensional problems. They involve the frenulum, yes, but also the cranial mobility that affects how the jaw moves, the upper cervical tension that limits how the head extends, the nervous system tone that determines whether the baby can settle into a feeding rhythm, and the functional mechanics of how the baby actually coordinates the suck, swallow, and breathe pattern at the breast or bottle. No single provider sees all of that. When both sides of the picture are covered, families get a clearer plan and faster progress.

A pattern shows up in both of our practices. A baby has been working with a lactation consultant. Latch is better, positioning is dialed in, but feeding is still uncomfortable or inefficient and nobody can fully explain why. Or a baby has been receiving cranial chiropractic care, the tension patterns are improving, but the feeding mechanics are still off and the parent is exhausted and losing confidence.

In most of those cases, the missing piece is the other provider.

What cranial chiropractic adds to tongue-tie and feeding cases

A baby's ability to feed well depends on more than frenulum mobility. The jaw has to open and extend freely. The head has to tip back without restriction. The cranial bones have to be mobile enough to accommodate the movement feeding requires. The nervous system has to be regulated enough for the baby to stay calm and coordinated through a full feed.

Birth is compressive. Even straightforward deliveries put significant force through the baby's cranium, upper neck, and sacrum. When that compression does not fully resolve, it shows up as tension patterns that limit range of motion, reduce jaw mobility, or keep the nervous system in a state of low-level stress that makes settling difficult. A baby who is arching, pulling off, clicking, or unable to sustain a deep latch may have a frenulum that needs addressing, but often has a cranial and upper-cervical component that is contributing just as much.

One of the most common patterns we see in tongue-tie cases is a baby whose frenulum is restricted but whose cranial and cervical presentation is doing more of the work. Torticollis, the head turning and tilting preference that shows up after delivery, is frequently present alongside a tongue tie and frequently missed. When a baby can only comfortably turn one direction, the latch mechanics change on each side. The breast or bottle that requires rotation toward the restricted side becomes the difficult one. Families often interpret this as a latch problem or a supply problem on one side. The actual driver is the cervical and cranial restriction limiting the baby's range. Releasing the frenulum without addressing the torticollis leaves the asymmetry in place. The latch difficulty on the restricted side does not resolve because the structural reason for it has not been touched.

Cranial restriction patterns from compression during delivery can also reduce jaw mobility and limit tongue range of motion even when the frenulum itself is not the primary issue. Some babies are evaluated for tongue tie, the frenulum looks borderline, and the decision is made to watch and wait. In those cases, cranial work often produces more feeding improvement than a frenulum release would have. Identifying which driver is doing the most work requires someone who can evaluate the cranial and cervical system directly.

Babies in lactation care who add cranial chiropractic work frequently break through plateaus that latch coaching and positioning work alone could not resolve. The structural piece unlocks range of motion the baby was not able to access before. After a frenulum release, the cranial side matters even more. The tissue is freer, but the body has been compensating around the restriction for weeks or months. Cranial and upper cervical work helps the nervous system integrate the new mobility rather than continuing to brace against a pattern that no longer exists.

What IBCLC care adds to cranial chiropractic cases

Cranial chiropractic improves the structure and nervous system tone that feeding depends on. It does not retrain the feeding pattern itself.

A baby whose cranial tension has been reduced still needs to learn what a deep latch feels like. The suck-swallow-breathe coordination has to be worked with directly. Positioning at the breast or bottle affects what the baby can access structurally, and getting that right requires someone who can watch the feed in real time and adjust what is happening in the moment.

Chiropractic patients with feeding presentations who are not also working with an IBCLC are leaving functional gains on the table. The structural work opens the door. Lactation care is what walks the baby through it. An IBCLC evaluates milk transfer and whether the baby is actually getting enough, identifies compensations the parent may not have noticed, and provides the hands-on feeding support that translates structural improvement into a functional, comfortable feed.

When a frenulum restriction is present, the IBCLC is also the provider best positioned to assess whether a release is indicated and to prepare the baby for it. Post-release, the lactation work is what closes the loop functionally. Without that support, families often find that the release helped partially but the feeding picture never fully normalized. The functional retraining is what completes the result.

What coordinated care looks like in practice

When a baby is shared between our practices, we communicate directly. Notes go between providers when families authorize it. If a baby is about to have a frenulum release, the chiropractic plan accounts for the pre and post-release period. If a baby in chiropractic care is not making feeding progress, the lactation evaluation happens early rather than after the family has spent months wondering why.

Families get one coherent picture. What the IBCLC sees at the breast and what the chiropractor sees in the cranial and cervical exam are different reads of the same baby. When both reads are in the room, the plan is more accurate and the progress is faster.

What this means for your family

Both lactation and cranial work can start at the same time, and that is usually the better path. If your family started one before the other, it is never too late to add the missing piece.

If you are working with a lactation consultant and feeding is still not fully resolving, a cranial chiropractic evaluation is worth having. Tension patterns in the cranium, jaw, and upper neck, including torticollis that may not have been formally diagnosed, can limit what your baby is physically capable of at the breast regardless of how well the latch mechanics are being coached.

If you are working with a chiropractor and your baby's cranial tension is improving but feeding is still a struggle, an IBCLC evaluation will tell you what is happening functionally. Structural improvement does not automatically translate into feeding improvement without direct lactation support.

You do not have to finish one before starting the other. In most cases, the overlap is where the progress happens.

From each of us

Alicea Sabella, IBCLC

Babies who are also working with Dr. Pellegrino come in with better cranial mobility, and I see it directly in how they feed. Latch improves faster. Babies who have plateaued often shift noticeably after adding chiropractic work. The structural piece changes what the baby is capable of at the breast.

I refer to Dr. Pellegrino when I see tension patterns that lactation work alone cannot fix: torticollis, jaw restriction, a baby who is compensating in ways positioning adjustments will not change. That referral includes babies with no diagnosed oral restriction. Womb positioning and long deliveries leave cranial tension whether or not a frenulum is involved. Those babies need structural work too.

Dr. Anthony Pellegrino, DC, DACCP

Some of the feeding cases I see need more than cranial work. The structural component may be addressed, but the baby still needs someone who can watch a full feed, assess transfer, and work with the parent on positioning and mechanics. That is Alicea's expertise, not mine. I refer to her when the feeding side is not resolving the way the structural improvements would predict, and she refers to me when her patients have cranial and cervical tension that is capping what lactation care can do. The referral moves in both directions because the clinical need does.

Frequently asked questions

My baby has a tongue tie. Who should we see first?

The more useful question is whether both providers are in the picture. Either office can help you figure out the right starting point based on what your baby is showing. In most cases both providers end up involved, and the earlier each has evaluated your baby, the better the planning.

My baby had a frenulum release but feeding is still difficult. Can chiropractic help?

Yes. Post-release, the tissue is freer but the body often continues the compensatory patterns it built around the restriction. Cranial and upper cervical work helps the nervous system integrate the new mobility. Many families see meaningful feeding improvement after adding chiropractic care post-release, particularly when torticollis or cranial restriction was also present.

We are already working with an IBCLC. Does my baby also need chiropractic care?

Signs that a cranial evaluation is worth having include clicking at the breast or bottle, shallow latch that does not improve with positioning adjustments, a head turning preference or asymmetry in how the baby feeds on each side, jaw tension, difficulty settling during or after feeds, and latch improvements that do not fully hold. A head turning preference in particular is a strong signal that a cervical or cranial evaluation is warranted.

We are already in chiropractic care. Does my baby also need an IBCLC?

If feeding mechanics are still off after structural improvement, an IBCLC evaluation is the right next step. Signs include inefficient transfer, nipple pain that persists, a baby who fatigues quickly during feeds, or a parent who is not confident the baby is getting enough. When feeding and weight gain are concerns, bringing in an IBCLC early gives you a direct read on milk transfer, separate from what the cranial work is doing and equally important.

Is cranial chiropractic safe for newborns?

Yes. Technique for newborns uses very light pressure, often just a few grams, applied to specific areas of the skull, upper neck, and sacrum. Most babies relax or fall asleep during the visit. It looks nothing like adult chiropractic care.

Do the chiropractor and lactation consultant coordinate care for shared patients?

Both practices share notes directly when families authorize it. Treatment is coordinated rather than running in parallel, and timing decisions are made with both providers in the picture.