Episode Details
Back to Episodes
Ep. 71, From Cavities to Airway: Why Pediatric Dentistry Can’t Ignore Sleep, Dr. Rafif Tayara
Season 5
Episode 4
Published 3 months, 1 week ago
Description
🎙️Dr. Stacy welcomes pediatric dentist and airway-focused clinician Dr. Rafif Tayara to the ASAP Pathway Podcast for a global conversation on early interceptive care, pediatric sleep-breathing red flags, and why “just looking at teeth” misses the real root causes.
Dr. Tayara shares how her career across Montreal, Abu Dhabi, Dubai, and Qatar led her to connect recurring childhood cavities to mouth breathing and low nighttime saliva—pushing her beyond traditional pediatric dentistry into airway, function, and sleep medicine (including training at Tufts University). They unpack why parents’ anxiety can transfer directly to kids in the dental chair, how behavior management affects early orthodontic access, and why multidisciplinary teamwork (ENT + dental + myofunctional therapy and more) is the only sustainable path.
They also address the backlash that can come with changing paradigms, the logic behind orthodontics influencing airway, and why early expansion and functional re-education can reduce complexity later—sometimes making “Phase 2” minimal. The episode wraps with fun rapid-fire questions, including a Tiësto concert night in Dubai and a bold Bangkok food moment.
IG: Dr. Rafif Tayara
IG: Junior Dental
Junior Dental Website
Dr. Tayara’s Book: Danny and Sarah Go to Dr Smile
🕰️ Chapters:
02:04 — “Danny and Sarah Go to Dr. Smile”
03:06 — Where to find the book + why she wrote it (fear-free first visits)
06:30 — “Kids borrow a parent’s mental health” in the dental chair
09:58 — Why kids behave differently when the parent steps out
11:38 — Dubai context + her career path and opening her clinic
14:15 — The cavity relapse problem: mouth breathing, saliva, and nighttime risk
16:10 — Airway + function journey: tongue posture, swallow, palate, adenoids
20:06 — Social media backlash + why early ortho/airway work matters
23:34 — Multidisciplinary care: ENT + function + expansion + resistance reduction
28:53 — Protocols in practice: myofunctional therapy, expanders, Invisalign First
45:47 — Barriers in dentistry: time, screening, questionnaires, practice models + wrap-up
🧠 Key Learnings:
Dr. Tayara shares how her career across Montreal, Abu Dhabi, Dubai, and Qatar led her to connect recurring childhood cavities to mouth breathing and low nighttime saliva—pushing her beyond traditional pediatric dentistry into airway, function, and sleep medicine (including training at Tufts University). They unpack why parents’ anxiety can transfer directly to kids in the dental chair, how behavior management affects early orthodontic access, and why multidisciplinary teamwork (ENT + dental + myofunctional therapy and more) is the only sustainable path.
They also address the backlash that can come with changing paradigms, the logic behind orthodontics influencing airway, and why early expansion and functional re-education can reduce complexity later—sometimes making “Phase 2” minimal. The episode wraps with fun rapid-fire questions, including a Tiësto concert night in Dubai and a bold Bangkok food moment.
IG: Dr. Rafif Tayara
IG: Junior Dental
Junior Dental Website
Dr. Tayara’s Book: Danny and Sarah Go to Dr Smile
🕰️ Chapters:
02:04 — “Danny and Sarah Go to Dr. Smile”
03:06 — Where to find the book + why she wrote it (fear-free first visits)
06:30 — “Kids borrow a parent’s mental health” in the dental chair
09:58 — Why kids behave differently when the parent steps out
11:38 — Dubai context + her career path and opening her clinic
14:15 — The cavity relapse problem: mouth breathing, saliva, and nighttime risk
16:10 — Airway + function journey: tongue posture, swallow, palate, adenoids
20:06 — Social media backlash + why early ortho/airway work matters
23:34 — Multidisciplinary care: ENT + function + expansion + resistance reduction
28:53 — Protocols in practice: myofunctional therapy, expanders, Invisalign First
45:47 — Barriers in dentistry: time, screening, questionnaires, practice models + wrap-up
🧠 Key Learnings:
- A big driver of pediatric dental “failure” can be airway-related, especially mouth breathing and reduced saliva at night—leading to cavity relapse even with strong hygiene and motivated parents.
- Parent anxiety can directly shape a child’s dental experience, and well-meaning language can unintentionally increase fear (the “unknown” is often the trigger).
- Behavior management is a real bottleneck for early orthodontic care—if clinicians can’t comfortably scan, take impressions, or earn trust, early intervention gets delayed into “come back later” monitoring.
- If you don’t know what you’re looking for (tongue posture, swallow pattern, function), you won’t find it—and “nothing to see here” becomes a training blind spot.
- The tongue can be the best or worst orthodontist: function can stabilize results or drive relapse, depending on posture and habits.
- Orthodontics influencing airway is basic anatomy/physics logic, especially when comparing adult sleep treatment mechanics (mandibular advancement/CPAP/MMA concepts) to pediatric orthopedic/orthodontic approaches.
- Kids often improve through combined care, not a single fix: airway evaluation + ENT involvement + expansion + functional re-educat