Tags: early orthodontic treatment, mouth breathing, crossbite, palate expander, braces, Waterbury CT, Southbury CT, orthodontist near me, children's orthodontics, board certified orthodontist
Category: Early Orthodontic Treatment, Children's Orthodontics
Parents often ask us about a child who snores, breathes with their mouth open, or seems to always have a stuffed-up nose — even when they're not sick. The short answer is: orthodontics can sometimes help, but only with the right diagnosis and the right timing.
Here's what every parent in Waterbury, Southbury, and the surrounding Connecticut communities should know.
Why Does My Child Breathe Through Their Mouth?
Mouth breathing in children can stem from a few different sources:
- Airway obstruction — enlarged tonsils or adenoids, allergies, or a deviated septum can block the nasal airway, forcing a child to breathe through their mouth instead
- Jaw and palate structure — a narrow upper jaw physically limits the space available for airflow through the nose, making nasal breathing harder
- Habit — some children develop mouth breathing as a habit even after an obstruction has been resolved
The key point for parents: if your child's upper jaw is too narrow, that's not a breathing problem — it's an orthodontic problem that directly impacts breathing. And that's where we come in.
What Is a Crossbite, and What Does It Have to Do With Breathing?
A crossbite is a type of bite misalignment where one or more upper teeth sit inside the lower teeth instead of overlapping them normally. Crossbites can appear at the front of the mouth (anterior crossbite) or the back (posterior crossbite).
What many parents don't realize is that crossbites and mouth breathing are often directly linked. When the upper jaw is too narrow, it reduces nasal airway space. The child responds by breathing through the mouth — which, over time, can further narrow the developing jaw, making the problem worse.
Research confirms this connection. Studies consistently find that children who breathe through their mouths are significantly more likely to develop a narrow upper arch, a high palatal vault, and posterior crossbite. One recent review found that mouth breathing is strongly associated with multiple types of bite problems including crossbites and open bites.
In other words, the airway and the bite are not separate issues — they're connected.
Signs Your Child May Have a Crossbite or Airway-Related Bite Problem
You don't need a dental degree to spot some of the early warning signs. Look for:
- Mouth open during sleep or even during the day at rest
- Chronic or frequent snoring
- Restless sleep, waking frequently, or seeming tired despite enough hours in bed
- Teeth that don't line up evenly when the mouth is closed
- Your child tends to chew on one side only
- The jaw shifts noticeably when your child closes their mouth
- Speech changes, particularly with "s" or "th" sounds
- A history of thumb-sucking or prolonged pacifier use past age 2–3
Any one of these is worth mentioning at your child's next appointment. Several together are a strong signal that an early orthodontic evaluation is overdue.
Why Early Evaluation (Around Age 7) Matters So Much
The American Association of Orthodontists recommends that children have their first orthodontic evaluation around age 7. Not because treatment always starts then — but because this is when a trained orthodontist can see developing problems before they become much harder to correct.
In children, the upper jaw is still growing. It's made up of two halves that meet in the middle at a structure called the midline suture, which doesn't fully fuse until around puberty. Before that fusion, an orthodontist can gently guide the jaw to grow wider — a process called palatal expansion. After puberty, that same correction may require surgery.
This is why timing matters so much with crossbites in particular. A child treated at age 8 may need only a simple appliance for several months. A teenager or adult with the same underlying problem may face braces combined with a surgical procedure and significantly longer treatment.
Early evaluation doesn't mean early treatment — but it means you'll know exactly where your child stands and won't miss a window that closes only once.
How Orthodontics Can Help With Mouth Breathing and Crossbite
When the underlying cause of mouth breathing is a narrow upper jaw, orthodontic treatment can address the root problem directly. The most common approach for younger children is a palate expander.
A palate expander is an appliance that sits against the roof of the mouth and is gradually adjusted to widen the upper jaw. Because the midline suture is still open in growing children, the expander gently separates the two halves of the jaw and encourages new bone to form in between — permanently widening the arch.
The benefits go beyond just the bite:
- More room for permanent teeth — expansion creates space for incoming adult teeth, often reducing or eliminating the need for extractions later
- Improved airway — a wider palate increases nasal airway volume, which can meaningfully reduce mouth breathing and snoring in children whose breathing issues are structural in origin
- Corrected crossbite — expansion directly addresses the most common cause of posterior crossbite
- Healthier jaw development — guiding jaw growth during the formative years leads to better long-term facial balance and function
After expansion, braces may be used to fine-tune tooth alignment. In some cases, we monitor a child through the mixed dentition (when baby and adult teeth are both present) and begin full braces treatment once the permanent teeth have come in. Every child is different, and Dr. Aronson personalizes every plan to the individual.
What If the Breathing Problem Is Medical, Not Orthodontic?
This is an important distinction — and one that distinguishes a thorough orthodontic evaluation from a rushed one.
If enlarged tonsils or adenoids are the primary cause of your child's breathing issues, the appropriate first step is usually a referral to an ENT (ear, nose, and throat) physician, not an orthodontist. Removing the obstruction may resolve the breathing issue on its own.
But here's the nuance: many children have both a medical airway issue and a structural jaw issue. When that's the case, addressing only one side of the equation often doesn't fully resolve the problem. The orthodontic and medical issues need to be treated together — in the right sequence.
Dr. Aronson takes a comprehensive approach to every evaluation. He examines not just how the teeth fit together but how the bite, jaw growth, and airway all interact. When appropriate, he will coordinate care with your child's pediatrician or ENT to ensure the treatment plan makes sense as a whole. You can read more about his approach on the Dr. Ross Aronson page.
Does Snoring Always Mean an Orthodontic Problem?
Not always. But if your child snores regularly and also shows any of the signs listed above — an open mouth at rest, a jaw that shifts when closing, teeth that don't line up evenly — it's worth an evaluation.
Chronic snoring in children is associated with poor sleep quality, difficulty concentrating, and even behavioral changes that can be mistaken for ADHD. When the cause is a structural airway issue related to jaw development, orthodontic treatment can make a real difference in your child's sleep and overall health — not just their smile.
This is one of the reasons we encourage parents not to wait until the teenage years to think about orthodontics. The problems we can correct easily at age 8 or 9 are often much harder and more expensive to address at 15 or 20.
What Happens at an Early Orthodontic Evaluation?
At Aronson Orthodontics, your child's first visit is always complimentary and low-pressure. There's no obligation, and the goal is simply to give you an accurate picture of your child's development.
During the evaluation, Dr. Aronson will:
- Conduct a thorough clinical exam of the teeth, bite, and jaw
- Take a digital 3D scan using our iTero scanner — no uncomfortable impressions
- Evaluate the airway and look for signs of structural issues related to breathing
- Review jaw growth and development for your child's age
- Give you a clear, honest assessment of whether treatment is needed now, monitoring is appropriate, or everything looks fine
You'll leave with a complete understanding of your child's orthodontic health and what, if anything, to expect going forward. We believe informed parents make the best decisions for their families — and our job is to give you the information you need.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: My child breathes through their mouth at night but seems fine during the day. Should I still bring them in? Yes. Nighttime mouth breathing is often the first sign of a structural issue. During the day, children compensate more easily — but the jaw and airway development happening in the background is the same.
Q: At what age can a palate expander be used? Palate expanders work best during the mixed dentition years, roughly ages 7–12, before the midline suture begins to fuse. The ideal timing depends on your child's individual growth stage — which is exactly what we assess at the evaluation.
Q: Will my child need braces after a palate expander? Sometimes yes, sometimes no. Expansion often creates enough space and alignment improvement that braces are minimal or unnecessary. For children with additional spacing or alignment issues, a phase of braces may follow after the permanent teeth have come in. Dr. Aronson will tell you honestly what to expect.
Q: Does my child need a referral to see Dr. Aronson? No referral needed. You can schedule a free consultation directly — call us at (203) 573-8034 or book online.
Q: What insurance do you accept? We accept all major PPO dental insurance plans and handle all paperwork on your behalf. Visit our payment and insurance page for details. We also offer 0% APR financing.
Ready to Find Out If Your Child Needs Help?
If your child snores, breathes with their mouth open, or you've noticed that their teeth don't seem to line up the way they should, an early evaluation is the most important thing you can do — and it costs you nothing.
Dr. Ross Aronson is the only board-certified orthodontist in the Middlebury area and one of the top Invisalign providers in the world. He personally oversees every patient's care from evaluation through treatment completion — no handoffs, no associates.
Schedule Your Child's Free Consultation →
Call: (203) 573-8034
Southbury Office: 33 Bullet Hill Rd #311, Southbury, CT 06488 Waterbury Office: 650 Chase Pkwy #2, Waterbury, CT 06708
We serve families throughout New Haven and Litchfield Counties — Waterbury, Southbury, Middlebury, Naugatuck, Oxford, Newtown, Watertown, Wolcott, Woodbury, and beyond.
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