Presenter: Amie Teague, MA/CCC-SLP. Overview of Presentation Oral -Sensory Stages of Oral -Motor...

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Presenter: Amie Teague, MA/CCC-SLP

Transcript of Presenter: Amie Teague, MA/CCC-SLP. Overview of Presentation Oral -Sensory Stages of Oral -Motor...

Page 1: Presenter: Amie Teague, MA/CCC-SLP. Overview of Presentation Oral -Sensory Stages of Oral -Motor Development Oral -Motor & Oral- Sensory Assessment Feeding.

Presenter: Amie Teague, MA/CCC-SLP

Page 2: Presenter: Amie Teague, MA/CCC-SLP. Overview of Presentation Oral -Sensory Stages of Oral -Motor Development Oral -Motor & Oral- Sensory Assessment Feeding.

Overview of Presentation

• Oral -Sensory

• Stages of Oral -Motor Development

• Oral -Motor & Oral- Sensory Assessment

• Feeding Development

• Oral -Sensory, Oral -Motor, and Behavioral Treatment

Page 3: Presenter: Amie Teague, MA/CCC-SLP. Overview of Presentation Oral -Sensory Stages of Oral -Motor Development Oral -Motor & Oral- Sensory Assessment Feeding.

What is Oral-Sensory Information ?

• Oral sensory information is a term that refers to the way the nervous system receives messages from the senses (hearing, sight, smell, taste, and touch) and turns them into appropriate motor and behavioral responses.

• We see the food. We smell the food. We can hear the food crunch, pop, or sizzle. We can taste the food. We can feel the texture of the food with our hands, our lips, our tongue, and our cheeks as we chew.

Page 4: Presenter: Amie Teague, MA/CCC-SLP. Overview of Presentation Oral -Sensory Stages of Oral -Motor Development Oral -Motor & Oral- Sensory Assessment Feeding.

What oral motor skills are needed for eating?

• Lips range of motion and strength

• Cheek range of motion and strength

• Tongue range of motion and strength

• Ability to make chewed food into a ball and sending it to back of mouth for swallowing

*Any weakness or discoordination of these skills interrupts the beautiful symphony of food preparation and swallowing

Page 5: Presenter: Amie Teague, MA/CCC-SLP. Overview of Presentation Oral -Sensory Stages of Oral -Motor Development Oral -Motor & Oral- Sensory Assessment Feeding.

What are the behavioral components of feeding disorders?

• Behavioral components of feeding disorders include learned behaviors and behaviors that existed prior to feeding disorder.

• Examples of behavioral difficulties are reactions caused by fear of certain foods, inability to tolerate certain foods within sight, and inability to tolerate certain foods within close proximity.

Page 6: Presenter: Amie Teague, MA/CCC-SLP. Overview of Presentation Oral -Sensory Stages of Oral -Motor Development Oral -Motor & Oral- Sensory Assessment Feeding.

Stages of Oral-Motor Development

Page 7: Presenter: Amie Teague, MA/CCC-SLP. Overview of Presentation Oral -Sensory Stages of Oral -Motor Development Oral -Motor & Oral- Sensory Assessment Feeding.

0-4 months

• Rooting reflex present (baby able to find food source with mouth)

• Sucking reflex present

• Strong gag reflex present

Page 8: Presenter: Amie Teague, MA/CCC-SLP. Overview of Presentation Oral -Sensory Stages of Oral -Motor Development Oral -Motor & Oral- Sensory Assessment Feeding.

4-6 months

• Opens mouth in anticipation of food

• Moves food backward with tongue

• Rooting reflex and gag reflex begin to diminish

Page 9: Presenter: Amie Teague, MA/CCC-SLP. Overview of Presentation Oral -Sensory Stages of Oral -Motor Development Oral -Motor & Oral- Sensory Assessment Feeding.

6-9 months

• Learns to keep thick purees inside the mouth

• Swallows solid foods without gagging

• Maintains lip closure longer

Page 10: Presenter: Amie Teague, MA/CCC-SLP. Overview of Presentation Oral -Sensory Stages of Oral -Motor Development Oral -Motor & Oral- Sensory Assessment Feeding.

9-12 months

• Able to move food around in the mouth

• Starts to use the jaw to mash food

• Uses cheek and lip corners to keep food on the biting surface

• Jaw and tongue begin to move in a circular motion for chewing

Page 11: Presenter: Amie Teague, MA/CCC-SLP. Overview of Presentation Oral -Sensory Stages of Oral -Motor Development Oral -Motor & Oral- Sensory Assessment Feeding.

12-18 months

• Starts to chew with horizontal and circular tongue/jaw movements

• Lip closure remains intermittent during swallow

• Upper lip begins to close on cup during cup drinking for better seal

• Tongue does not protrude during drinking

Page 12: Presenter: Amie Teague, MA/CCC-SLP. Overview of Presentation Oral -Sensory Stages of Oral -Motor Development Oral -Motor & Oral- Sensory Assessment Feeding.

18-24 months

• Able to chew firmer foods

• Uses a controlled, sustained bite on a biscuit

• Intermittently loses food or saliva while chewing

Page 13: Presenter: Amie Teague, MA/CCC-SLP. Overview of Presentation Oral -Sensory Stages of Oral -Motor Development Oral -Motor & Oral- Sensory Assessment Feeding.

24-36 months

• Uses consistent oral movements during feeding

• Minimal spillage noted

• Circular jaw movements during chewing with scattered chewing patterns of vertical and diagonal bites

Page 14: Presenter: Amie Teague, MA/CCC-SLP. Overview of Presentation Oral -Sensory Stages of Oral -Motor Development Oral -Motor & Oral- Sensory Assessment Feeding.

Oral- Motor and Oral- Sensory Assessment

What are we looking for?

Page 15: Presenter: Amie Teague, MA/CCC-SLP. Overview of Presentation Oral -Sensory Stages of Oral -Motor Development Oral -Motor & Oral- Sensory Assessment Feeding.

Oral -Motor Assessment

• Facial symmetry• Lip symmetry & ROM• Cheek symmetry & ROM• Tongue symmetry & ROM• Tongue movement side to side/ tongue tip elevation• Suck/swallow/breath pattern

Are these oral structures/characteristics within normal limits?

Page 16: Presenter: Amie Teague, MA/CCC-SLP. Overview of Presentation Oral -Sensory Stages of Oral -Motor Development Oral -Motor & Oral- Sensory Assessment Feeding.

Oral -Sensory Assessment

• Oral aversion

• Tolerates facial stimulation

• Tolerates 1-2 textures of nonfood items

Page 17: Presenter: Amie Teague, MA/CCC-SLP. Overview of Presentation Oral -Sensory Stages of Oral -Motor Development Oral -Motor & Oral- Sensory Assessment Feeding.

Hands on Demonstration

Page 18: Presenter: Amie Teague, MA/CCC-SLP. Overview of Presentation Oral -Sensory Stages of Oral -Motor Development Oral -Motor & Oral- Sensory Assessment Feeding.

Feeding Development

Page 19: Presenter: Amie Teague, MA/CCC-SLP. Overview of Presentation Oral -Sensory Stages of Oral -Motor Development Oral -Motor & Oral- Sensory Assessment Feeding.

0-4 Months

• Breast milk or formula

• Eats every 2-4 hours

• Takes 4-8 ounces in 20 minutes or less

Page 20: Presenter: Amie Teague, MA/CCC-SLP. Overview of Presentation Oral -Sensory Stages of Oral -Motor Development Oral -Motor & Oral- Sensory Assessment Feeding.

4-6 months

• Remains hungry after 8-10 breast feedings, or 32 ounces of formula a day

• Starts solid foods such as rice cereal, oatmeal cereal, etc

• (*quantity is not as important as quality at this age*)

Page 21: Presenter: Amie Teague, MA/CCC-SLP. Overview of Presentation Oral -Sensory Stages of Oral -Motor Development Oral -Motor & Oral- Sensory Assessment Feeding.

Bottle Demonstration

Page 22: Presenter: Amie Teague, MA/CCC-SLP. Overview of Presentation Oral -Sensory Stages of Oral -Motor Development Oral -Motor & Oral- Sensory Assessment Feeding.

6-9 months

• Continue cereals

• Add juice and Stage 1 baby foods (vegetables, fruits, then meats)

• Introduce new foods slowly

Page 23: Presenter: Amie Teague, MA/CCC-SLP. Overview of Presentation Oral -Sensory Stages of Oral -Motor Development Oral -Motor & Oral- Sensory Assessment Feeding.

9-12 months

• Continues cereals, juices, and Stage 1 and Stage 2 baby foods

• Introduce finger foods and table foods as recommended by baby’s pediatrician

Page 24: Presenter: Amie Teague, MA/CCC-SLP. Overview of Presentation Oral -Sensory Stages of Oral -Motor Development Oral -Motor & Oral- Sensory Assessment Feeding.

12-18 months

• Table foods and/or Stage 3 baby foods

• 3 meals/day with 3-5 snacks/day

• Learning to self feed with a spoon(often turns it over before reaching the mouth)

Page 25: Presenter: Amie Teague, MA/CCC-SLP. Overview of Presentation Oral -Sensory Stages of Oral -Motor Development Oral -Motor & Oral- Sensory Assessment Feeding.

18-24 months

• Table foods

• Intermittently gets spoon to mouth without turning it over

• Lifts cup to mouth and may tip it too much causing spillage

Page 26: Presenter: Amie Teague, MA/CCC-SLP. Overview of Presentation Oral -Sensory Stages of Oral -Motor Development Oral -Motor & Oral- Sensory Assessment Feeding.

24-36 months

• Table foods

• Uses fork

• Consistently get one protein, one fruit, and one starch per meal

Page 27: Presenter: Amie Teague, MA/CCC-SLP. Overview of Presentation Oral -Sensory Stages of Oral -Motor Development Oral -Motor & Oral- Sensory Assessment Feeding.

Questions