ASAP Pathway: THE PODCAST

Dr. Stacy Becker, DDS

In a world where discussions about sleep and airway issues dominate the dental landscape, the journey to understanding and addressing these concerns has evolved drastically. Join us as we dive into the remarkable transformation of dental care over the last decade, from overlooking airway and sleep health to making it a core aspect of treatment planning. Join us as we uncover the journey of understanding and addressing sleep and airway concerns in children. Whether you're a dedicated Dentist seeking comprehensive guidance, a health care provider wanting to collaborate and Find a Provider to work with, or a concerned Parent evaluating your child's well-being, our podcast sheds light on a clear pathway forward. To take the next step, become a member of our community or access valuable resources for your child's evaluation. Visit our website now and be a part of the positive change! https://asappathway.com/

  1. Ep.76, “All TMJ Patients Are NUTS”… Here’s What That Really Means, Dr. Jamison Spencer

    APR 7

    Ep.76, “All TMJ Patients Are NUTS”… Here’s What That Really Means, Dr. Jamison Spencer

    📝  In this episode of ASAP Pathway, hosts Drs. Stacy, Michelle, and Tracey are joined by a highly respected leader in the field of TMJ and dental sleep medicine, Dr. Jamison Spencer. With nearly three decades of experience treating over 25,000 patients, Dr. Spencer brings a powerful and paradigm-shifting perspective to a topic many dentists avoid: temporomandibular joint disorders (TMJ). Why are TMJ patients often labeled as “difficult”? Why do so many clinicians feel unprepared to treat them? And perhaps most importantly—are we sending patients to surgery when we don’t have to? This conversation dives deep into the gaps in dental education, the misunderstood progression of TMJ dysfunction (from clicking to locking).   Dr. Spencer challenges long-held beliefs and introduces emerging, non-surgical approaches—like platelet-rich fibrin (PRF)—that are changing outcomes for even the most complex cases. The discussion also connects TMJ to airway, growth and development, and early intervention in children—highlighting why dentists play a central role in both prevention and long-term health outcomes. This is more than a clinical conversation—it’s a call to rethink how we diagnose, treat, and truly understand TMJ. About Dr Jamison Spencer Learn Adult Dental Sleep Medicine and TMJ Therapy: The Spencer Study Club ⏱️ CHAPTERS 00:00 — Intro + ASAP Pathway welcome  00:29 — Meet Dr. Jameson Spencer 03:07 — Spencer Study Club + TMJ education 04:14 — Why dentists avoid TMJ patients 06:38 — “All TMJ patients are nuts” explained 07:28 — The problem with dental education on TMJ 08:23 — The dangerous gap: do nothing vs surgery 08:56 — PRF: A game changer in TMJ treatment 10:02 — Why surgery often makes TMJ worse 11:12 — Patients flying in to avoid surgery 12:26 — Why PRF works (and why it’s different) 13:19 — Peptides, exosomes, and regenerative medicine 14:51 — Dentistry vs medicine: prevention vs sick care 16:20 — Why most TMJ surgeries can be avoided 17:48 — What patients actually care about: pain + function 19:57 — Can joints actually heal? (Shocking cases) 21:37 — “That’s not possible”… but it is 23:15 — Why surgeons don’t want to do TMJ surgery 24:54 — You can always do surgery later 26:00 — TMJ, airway, and anatomy connection 27:28 — Early signs: what to look for in kids 28:06 — Disc displacement explained simply 29:06 — Why orthodontics may trigger TMJ symptoms 30:03 — The bite is the dictator 31:08 — Why the body prioritizes survival over structure 32:12 — Clicking → locking progression 33:14 — The biggest misconception about jaw clicking 34:32 — Why dentists misunderstand TMJ anatomy 35:33 — Ignoring the disc = ignoring the problem 36:24 — Why anatomy must be respected in treatment 37:46 — Why temporary fixes don’t last 39:00 — Occlusion vs muscles vs joints: what really matters 40:25 — TMJ and airway connection in kids 41:10 — Growth implications of disc displacement 42:03 — Rethinking orthodontics and jaw position 43:00 — Why changing anatomy matters long-term 44:20 — Treatment philosophy: options, not dogma 🧠 Key Learnings TMJ patients are often misunderstood—not difficult.Most dentists are not properly trained to diagnose or treat TMJ.Patients are too often pushed toward surgery too quickly.There are effective non-surgical options for TMJ treatment.Platelet-Rich Fibrin (PRF) is emerging as a powerful treatment tool.Patient outcomes should be measured by pain relief and function—not just imaging.The bite (occlusion) plays a major role in TMJ health.Jaw clicking is a sign of disc displacement—not something to ignore.When clicking “goes away,” the condition may actually be getting worse.Ignoring joint anatomy can lead to long-term damage and dysfunction.Early signs of TMJ issues can be identified in children.Dentists play a critical role in both treating and preventing TMJ disorders.This is the ASAP Pathway Podcast, Airway, Sleep, and Pediatric Pathway, where sleep and airway health take center stage, one breath at a time. VISIT: ASAP Pathway Please subscribe, share, and tune in to future episodes of how we can help children live their best lives, one breath, and restful night's sleep at a time. Don't miss this exciting launch into a world of knowledge and transformation.Because Kids Can't Wait... CLICK HERE To Find an ASAP Pathway ProviderCLICK HERE To Become an ASAP Pathway ProviderCLICK HERE FOR ASAP Pathway IN-PERSON COURSESCLICK HERE To See If Your Child Is At Risk!ASAP FREE GIFT AND E NEWSLETTERSUBCRIBE AND SHARE AT OUR OTHER PLATFORMS BELOW ⬇️ ASAP YouTube ▶️ 🔗 ASAP YouTube Music 🔗  ASAP on Spotify 🔗 ASAP IHeartRadio ❤️🔗  ASAP Amazon Music 🎵🔗  ASAP Apple Podcast 🍎🔗 ASAP Pathway MEMBERSHIP OPTIONS, LEARNING and COURSES BELOW ⬇️ 🙌 Join The Practice Breakfast Club! ☕️🔗 2026 ASAP Mini-Residency Pathway 🙌🔗 WANT TO BE A MEMBER IN ASAP Pathway?  ASAP Membership Options BELOW: 🎉👇 ASAP Immersion Membership🔗 OR Comprehensive ASAP Pathway Membership🔗

    52 min
  2. Ep.75, Still Exhausted? Why "Successful" Sleep Apnea Treatments Still Fail, Dr. Layne Martin and Chris Gillette

    MAR 31

    Ep.75, Still Exhausted? Why "Successful" Sleep Apnea Treatments Still Fail, Dr. Layne Martin and Chris Gillette

    In this episode of ASAP Pathway: The Podcast, Dr. Stacy dives into a powerful and eye-opening conversation with Chris Gillette and Dr. Layne Martin on a topic that is often overlooked in Dental Sleep Medicine: sleep architecture. While most discussions in airway dentistry focus on opening the airway and reducing apnea events, this episode challenges that narrow perspective. Chris, a registered sleep technologist with over 20 years of experience, and Dr. Layne Martin, a Dentist with  Orthodontic Residency experience, share how treating apnea alone does not guarantee restorative, high-quality sleep. They explore what happens between sleep stages, why fragmented sleep can leave patients feeling exhausted even after “successful” treatment, and how both CPAP and traditional oral appliances can unintentionally disrupt the brain’s natural sleep patterns. The conversation expands into pediatric sleep, mouth breathing, growth and development, and why early intervention matters more than ever. Dr. Layne Martin also shares how his own journey—from full mouth rehab dentistry to orthodontics and sleep—completely shifted how he evaluates and treats patients. This episode is a must-listen for dentists, healthcare providers, and anyone interested in understanding why true sleep health is far more complex than just airway management—and how a more comprehensive approach can transform patient outcomes. Chris Gillette: LinkedIn Dr. Layne Martin: LinkedIn airVata Website Open Air Pillow ($25 off either pillow code: ASAP_Podcast25) $35 off airVata for the Month of April 2026! CLICK HERE ⏱ Chapters 00:00 — Intro + ASAP Pathway course announcement  00:53 — Meet Chris Gillette and Dr. Layne Martin 02:29 — What is a sleep technologist (RPSGT)? 03:45 — Chris’s journey into sleep medicine 05:10 — Dr. Layne Martin’s journey from dentistry to airway-focused care 08:56 — Challenging the current paradigm in sleep dentistry 12:01 — What is sleep architecture and why it matters 13:19 — Why patients still feel exhausted after treatment 14:56 — Fragmented sleep and micro-arousals explained 15:50 — Why removing CPAP mid-sleep is harmful 17:10 — Sleep stages, REM, and restorative sleep cycles 18:48 — The impact of foreign objects on sleep quality 21:20 — Mouth breathing, nasal function, and airway health 24:08 — Developing a better oral appliance approach 28:12 — Why sleep medicine is too focused on airway alone 31:06 — Rethinking treatment: beyond CPAP and appliances 34:52 — Pediatric sleep, growth, and early intervention 36:12 — Dentistry’s role in airway (whether you realize it or not) 40:25 — Why deep sleep (delta sleep) is critical for growth 41:10 — Introducing jaw stabilization and new device concepts 46:01 — Bite changes and why traditional devices can fail 48:05 — Static vs dynamic appliances and brain response 50:30 — Comfort, compliance, and long-term success in treatment 🧠 Key Learnings  1. Treating apnea alone does not equal good sleep. Reducing AHI (apnea events) does not guarantee that a patient is getting restorative sleep. Sleep quality and architecture matter just as much.  2. Sleep architecture is critical to health True restorative sleep requires proper cycling through stages: Stage 1 → Stage 2 → Deep Sleep → REM, multiple times per night.  3. Fragmented sleep is a major hidden issue Micro-arousals caused by discomfort, devices, or airway instability can prevent patients from reaching deep and REM sleep—even if apnea is treated.  4. Foreign objects can disrupt the brain CPAP masks or bulky oral appliances can trigger the brain to perceive a threat, leading to disrupted sleep transitions and poor sleep quality.  5. REM sleep is essential—and often missed Patients frequently miss REM sleep due to fragmentation, leading to fatigue, poor recovery, and long-term health risks.  6. Mouth breathing has no physiological benefit The nose has dozens of functions that support health, while mouth breathing contributes to poor airway function and overall health issues.  7. Jaw position and stability matter in sleep An unstable or falling jaw can worsen airway obstruction and contribute to poor sleep quality and clenching/grinding.  8. Dentistry is always affecting airway Whether intentional or not, every dental treatment (orthodontics, restorations, night guards) impacts airway and breathing. 9. Pediatric sleep is critical for development Children require deep sleep for growth and brain development. Disrupted sleep can lead to developmental and health issues.  10. Traditional approaches may be too narrow The current model often focuses only on airway mechanics, ignoring neurological and physiological aspects of sleep. 11. Comfort drives compliance If a patient cannot tolerate a device, they will not use it—making even the most effective treatment useless. 12. Sleep medicine needs a more comprehensive approach True treatment must consider airway, neurology, behavior, anatomy, and patient comfort together. This is the ASAP Pathway Podcast, Airway, Sleep, and Pediatric Pathway, where sleep and airway health take center stage, one breath at a time. VISIT: ASAP Pathway Please subscribe, share, and tune in to future episodes of how we can help children live their best lives, one breath, and restful night's sleep at a time. Don't miss this exciting launch into a world of knowledge and transformation.Because Kids Can't Wait... CLICK HERE To Find an ASAP Pathway ProviderCLICK HERE To Become an ASAP Pathway ProviderCLICK HERE FOR ASAP Pathway IN-PERSON COURSESCLICK HERE To See If Your Child Is At Risk!ASAP FREE GIFT AND E NEWSLETTERSUBCRIBE AND SHARE AT OUR OTHER PLATFORMS BELOW ⬇️ ASAP YouTube ▶️ 🔗 ASAP YouTube Music 🔗  ASAP on Spotify 🔗 ASAP IHeartRadio ❤️🔗  ASAP Amazon Music 🎵🔗  ASAP Apple Podcast 🍎🔗 ASAP Pathway MEMBERSHIP OPTIONS, LEARNING and COURSES BELOW ⬇️ 🙌 Join The Practice Breakfast Club! ☕️🔗 2026 ASAP Mini-Residency Pathway 🙌🔗 WANT TO BE A MEMBER IN ASAP Pathway?  ASAP Membership Options BELOW: 🎉👇 ASAP Immersion Membership🔗 OR Comprehensive ASAP Pathway Membership🔗

    1h 11m
  3. Ep. 74, From Survival to Fulfillment: A Dentist’s Story of Recovery, Dr. Jaren Argyle

    MAR 23

    Ep. 74, From Survival to Fulfillment: A Dentist’s Story of Recovery, Dr. Jaren Argyle

    📝  In this episode, Drs. Stacy and Michelle sit down with Dr. Jaren Argyle, founder of The Elevated Dentist, for a deeply personal and important conversation about mental health, fulfillment, and the hidden emotional burden many dentists carry. Dr. Argyle shares how the traits that often make dentists successful—high achievement, perfectionism, and deep care for others—can also create the perfect storm for burnout, depression, and isolation. He opens up about his own life-changing experience with suicidal ideation during a difficult season in his marriage, and how that moment became the catalyst for a profound shift from external validation to internal peace. Together, they explore why so many dentists define success by productivity, revenue, and outside expectations, and how easily that can pull them away from what they actually want in life and practice. The conversation highlights the importance of vulnerability, coaching, supportive community, and what it means to move from “prevention” toward actively promoting wellness, joy, and fulfillment before crisis occurs. This episode is an honest and hopeful reminder that professional success does not guarantee emotional wellbeing—and that it is possible to build a life and practice that truly align with who you are. Suicide Hotline: #988, Open 24/7/365 LinkedIn Jaren Argyle FB Jaren Argyle IG Jaren Argyle The Elevated Dentist Redefining Success Masterclass Books of Interest Below: ⬇️ Wheel of LIfe Assessment Success Mindsets The Gap and the Gain Into the Magic Shop 📖 CHAPTERS:  00:00 — Welcome + Introducing Dr. Jaren Argyle 01:45 — Why dentistry can be the “perfect storm” for mental health struggles 03:28 — The three personality traits common in dentists 06:42 — Why dentists blame themselves when things go wrong 09:14 — The problem with success being defined externally 13:06 — Jaren’s personal story: marriage struggles and reaching a breaking point 17:24 — Suicidal ideation, hopelessness, and the moment things shifted 20:24 — From external validation to internal loci of control 22:38 — “I don’t need my wife, but I want her” — changing the framework 26:20 — Climbing the wrong ladder: why dentists chase the wrong goals 33:16 — Needs vs wants, oxygen masks, and redefining what matters 34:18 — Vulnerability, ego, and why dentists struggle to ask for help 42:16 — The Gap and the Gain: how dentists measure success the wrong way 47:05 — Why Jaren created The Elevated Dentist 55:20 — Utah wellness events, unique ability, and designing a more fulfilling life 01:05:02 — Promoting wellness instead of waiting for crisis 01:15:19 — Rapid-fire questions and closing reflections 🧠 Key Learnings Dentistry creates a unique mental health risk profile Dr. Argyle explains that many dentists share three traits: they are high achievers, perfectionists, and deeply caring people. That combination can create a powerful internal pressure that becomes difficult to manage.Dentists often define success externally From school onward, many dentists are conditioned to measure success through grades, performance, productivity, revenue, and approval from others rather than by internal alignment or peace.Clinical success does not guarantee personal fulfillment A growing practice, income, and professional milestones can all be present while a dentist still feels emotionally empty, stuck, or disconnected.Suicidal ideation can appear suddenly Dr. Jaren Argyle’s story highlights that these thoughts may not always come after years of chronic depression—they can emerge quickly when stress, hopelessness, and emotional burden collide.Internal loci of control can be life-changing One of Jaren’s biggest turning points was realizing he could no longer define his worth based on someone else’s happiness or approval.There is a powerful difference between “need” and “want” Shifting relationships and life circumstances from need to want creates freedom, healthier attachment, and less emotional dependency.Dentists need more support before crisis Jaren emphasizes that wellness conversations should happen before someone reaches burnout, depression, or suicidal ideation—not only after a crisis.Vulnerability is essential for healing Dentists often struggle with ego and self-protection, but asking for help, opening up, and becoming more vulnerable is a crucial first step toward change. Many dentists live in “the gap” instead of “the gain” Comparing yourself to an ideal or to others creates discouragement, while comparing yourself to your own growth and progress creates a healthier mindset.Fulfillment grows when you work in your “unique ability” Identifying the work that energizes you, aligns with your strengths, and creates meaning is key to building a sustainable and joyful professional life.Wellness should be actively promoted, not just crisis-managed A major theme of the episode is the idea of promoting wellbeing, joy, connection, and purpose rather than simply trying to prevent collapse. This is the ASAP Pathway Podcast, Airway, Sleep, and Pediatric Pathway, where sleep and airway health take center stage, one breath at a time. VISIT: ASAP Pathway Please subscribe, share, and tune in to future episodes of how we can help children live their best lives, one breath, and restful night's sleep at a time. Don't miss this exciting launch into a world of knowledge and transformation.Because Kids Can't Wait... CLICK HERE To Find an ASAP Pathway ProviderCLICK HERE To Become an ASAP Pathway ProviderCLICK HERE FOR ASAP Pathway IN-PERSON COURSESCLICK HERE To See If Your Child Is At Risk!ASAP FREE GIFT AND E NEWSLETTERSUBCRIBE AND SHARE AT OUR OTHER PLATFORMS BELOW ⬇️ ASAP YouTube ▶️ 🔗 ASAP YouTube Music 🔗  ASAP on Spotify 🔗 ASAP IHeartRadio ❤️🔗  ASAP Amazon Music 🎵🔗  ASAP Apple Podcast 🍎🔗 ASAP Pathway MEMBERSHIP OPTIONS, LEARNING and COURSES BELOW ⬇️ 🙌 Join The Practice Breakfast Club! ☕️🔗 2026 ASAP Mini-Residency Pathway 🙌🔗 WANT TO BE A MEMBER IN ASAP Pathway?  ASAP Membership Options BELOW: 🎉👇 ASAP Immersion Membership🔗 OR Comprehensive ASAP Pathway Membership🔗

    1h 20m
  4. Ep. 73, From Chewing Device to Neurological Tool: The MyoMunchee Journey, Dr. Mary Bourke

    MAR 9

    Ep. 73, From Chewing Device to Neurological Tool: The MyoMunchee Journey, Dr. Mary Bourke

    📝 In this episode of ASAP Pathway; The Podcast,  Dr. Stacy sits down with Australian chiropractor and Myomunchee leader Dr. Mary Bourke to explore the powerful connection between oral function, neurological development, and lifelong health.Dr. Bourke shares the story behind the Myomunchee device—originally developed by her father in the 1960s after observing the powerful jaw structure of indigenous populations and recognizing the role chewing plays in oral health. What began as a periodontal and salivary health tool eventually revealed broader impacts on jaw development, bite alignment, and muscular function. The conversation expands into the neurological foundations of oral development, including primitive reflexes, early feeding patterns, and how sucking, chewing, swallowing, and breathing must coordinate for proper development. Dr. Bourke explains how retained reflexes, prolonged pacifier use, and missed developmental milestones can influence oral function, nervous system regulation, and even behavioral patterns later in life. They also discuss the growing importance of collaboration between dentistry, chiropractic care, speech therapy, and other healthcare disciplines to support early childhood development. The episode highlights the importance of recognizing dysfunction early and introduces the Oral Motor Foundations program, designed to help healthcare professionals understand developmental milestones and support healthy neurological integration. IG: Myomunchee FB: Myomunchee YouTube: Myomunchee Myomunchee Oral Motor Foundations Are you a practitioner working in the 0-2 year space?  Explore the Myo Munchee Baby Certification pathway https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6nw_4auCdg0&feature=youtu.be  Are you a parent? Visit https://www.myomunchee.com to access parent Resources or to get in touch with a Myo Munchee Certified practitioner. Follow & Connect with Myo Munchee: YouTube: @myomunchee7624    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/myomunchee/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/myomunchee/ Email: hello@myomunchee.com Website: https://www.myomunchee.com ⏱ CHAPTERS: 00:00 — Introduction to Dr. Mary Bourke and Myomunchee 02:24 — The history of Myomunchee and its 1966 patent 04:25 — Discovering chewing’s impact on oral health and salivary function 06:30 — Early research with Osaka Dental University and children’s chewing studies 08:01 — Chiropractic perspectives on TMJ, posture, and full-body health 11:37 — Why healthcare silos prevent whole-body understanding 12:47 — Discovering myofunctional therapy as the missing piece 16:00 — Dentistry’s evolving role in prevention and neurological health 18:44 — Introducing Oral Motor Foundations and the brain–mouth connection 26:30 — Primitive reflexes, breastfeeding, and early neurological development 31:30 — Pacifiers, chewing development, and oral milestones 39:55 — Food aversions, nervous system dysregulation, and oral sensory input 47:20 — Retained reflexes and long-term impacts into adulthood 51:10 — The Oral Motor Foundations education platform for clinicians 🧠 Key Learnings Chewing plays a critical role in oral healthEarly Myomunchee research focused on improving salivary flow and periodontal health through chewing stimulation, which also strengthens oral musculature.Oral function can influence bite developmentClinicians observed that children using chewing devices showed changes in crossbites and open bites, demonstrating how muscular activity influences dental alignment.Dentistry and chiropractic perspectives can complement each otherDr. Bourke explains how viewing the jaw within a full-body framework—including posture and neurology—helps practitioners better understand dysfunction.Primitive reflexes form the foundation of early developmentBabies rely on reflexes such as rooting, sucking, and swallowing to coordinate breathing and feeding. These reflexes guide neurological wiring in early infancy. Breastfeeding supports neurological coordinationBreastfeeding activates suck-swallow-breathe coordination and stimulates early neurological development through central pattern generators in the brainstem.Pacifier use is helpful early—but timing mattersPacifiers can help organize newborn neurological patterns but should typically be phased out around six months so the tongue can assume its natural position in the palate. Retained primitive reflexes can affect oral and body functionIf reflexes do not integrate properly, individuals may experience oral hypersensitivity, gag reflexes, feeding challenges, or broader nervous system dysregulation.Early oral sensory exposure shapes brain developmentThe mouth is the first three-dimensional mapping system for the brain. Tongue contact with the palate and oral exploration provide essential neurological feedback.Oral dysfunction often appears alongside other symptomsMouth breathing, sleep disruption, ear infections, malocclusion, food aversions, and behavioral regulation issues often occur together within the same developmental pattern.Early screening by healthcare professionals is criticalDentists, chiropractors, speech therapists, and other clinicians can help identify developmental dysfunction early and guide families toward appropriate interventions.This is the ASAP Pathway Podcast, Airway, Sleep, and Pediatric Pathway, where sleep and airway health take center stage, one breath at a time. VISIT: ASAP Pathway Please subscribe, share, and tune in to future episodes of how we can help children live their best lives, one breath, and restful night's sleep at a time. Don't miss this exciting launch into a world of knowledge and transformation.Because Kids Can't Wait... CLICK HERE To Find an ASAP Pathway ProviderCLICK HERE To Become an ASAP Pathway ProviderCLICK HERE FOR ASAP Pathway IN-PERSON COURSESCLICK HERE To See If Your Child Is At Risk!ASAP FREE GIFT AND E NEWSLETTERSUBCRIBE AND SHARE AT OUR OTHER PLATFORMS BELOW ⬇️ ASAP YouTube ▶️ 🔗 ASAP YouTube Music 🔗  ASAP on Spotify 🔗 ASAP IHeartRadio ❤️🔗  ASAP Amazon Music 🎵🔗  ASAP Apple Podcast 🍎🔗 ASAP Pathway MEMBERSHIP OPTIONS, LEARNING and COURSES BELOW ⬇️ 🙌

    1h 5m
  5. Ep.72, Beyond AHI: What Actually Drives Pediatric Growth and Development, Dr. Sandra Kahn

    FEB 24

    Ep.72, Beyond AHI: What Actually Drives Pediatric Growth and Development, Dr. Sandra Kahn

    🎙️In this episode of ASAP Pathway, Dr. Stacy sits down with orthodontist, researcher, and inventor Dr. Sandra Kahn to explore the deeper connection between sleep architecture, craniofacial growth, and long-term health in children. Drawing from her personal journey as a mother and clinician, Dr. Kahn shares how her own children’s challenges led her beyond traditional orthodontics and into the root causes of growth dysfunction—nasal breathing, oral posture, and most critically, deep sleep. Together, they discuss why early intervention alone isn’t always sustainable without maintenance, how nitric oxide and nasal breathing impact brain “cleaning” during stage 3 sleep, and why promoting health through proper resting posture may matter more than treating symptoms during the day. They also unpack the concept of the “invisible swallow,” the role of negative intraoral pressure during sleep, and how environmental—not genetic—factors may drive malocclusion and jaw shrinkage. Finally, the conversation turns toward the emotional realities for families navigating airway care, reminding parents that while form and function matter, preserving family connection and reducing overwhelm is equally essential. Register Here for Dr. Kahn's Family Reset Airway Retreat USE CODE: DRSTACY5 for a DISCOUNT!!💰 Visit Forwardontics IG: Forwardontics Article Referenced: Impact of Palatal Expansion With Up-Locker on Children With Sleep-Disordered-Breathing: A Clinical Trial ⏱️ Chapters 00:00 — Introduction to Dr. Sandra Kahn 04:28 — A Mother’s Journey Beyond Traditional Orthodontics 07:34 — Two Children, Two Airway Extremes 10:13 — Health Promotion vs Disease Prevention 11:38 — Deep Sleep and Why “Health Happens at Night” 13:03 — The Tropic Premise: Resting Oral Posture During Sleep 16:03 — Sleep Architecture, Glymphatic Flow, and Growth 20:20 — Nitric Oxide, Nasal Breathing, and Brain Disconnection 26:00 — Early Intervention vs Long-Term Sustainability 29:05 — The Invisible Swallow and Negative Pressure 36:21 — Post-Surgical Rehab and Why Treatment Relapses 50:21 — Family Stress, Less-Is-More, and Preserving Connection 🧠 Key Learnings Deep (stage 3 non-REM) sleep is when growth hormone release and brain “cleaning” occur—making sleep architecture critical for pediatric growth and emotional regulation.Proper nasal breathing and relaxed oral resting posture during sleep may influence craniofacial development more than daytime behaviors alone.Nitric oxide’s bioavailability, not just its production, is influenced by nasal airflow dynamics and may affect vascular dilation and glymphatic drainage during sleep.Early orthodontic or ENT interventions can improve anatomy but may not be sustainable without functional maintenance (“rehab”) of resting oral posture.Malocclusion and jaw shrinkage may be environmentally driven, emphasizing the importance of early-life conditions over genetics alone.Teaching a relaxed “invisible swallow” (maintaining minimal negative intraoral pressure) may help support effortless resting posture during sleep.The first 1000 days—from conception through early childhood—represent a key developmental window for establishing healthy breathing and swallowing patterns.Over-focusing on treatment can create stress within families; promoting health through simple, consistent conditions may be more sustainable than aggressive intervention.Preserving parent-child relationships during care is essential—family bond disruption can have lasting emotional consequences. This is the ASAP Pathway Podcast, Airway, Sleep, and Pediatric Pathway, where sleep and airway health take center stage, one breath at a time. VISIT: ASAP Pathway Please subscribe, share, and tune in to future episodes of how we can help children live their best lives, one breath, and restful night's sleep at a time. Don't miss this exciting launch into a world of knowledge and transformation.Because Kids Can't Wait... CLICK HERE To Find an ASAP Pathway ProviderCLICK HERE To Become an ASAP Pathway ProviderCLICK HERE FOR ASAP Pathway IN-PERSON COURSESCLICK HERE To See If Your Child Is At Risk!ASAP FREE GIFT AND E NEWSLETTERSUBCRIBE AND SHARE AT OUR OTHER PLATFORMS BELOW ⬇️ ASAP YouTube ▶️ 🔗 ASAP YouTube Music 🔗  ASAP on Spotify 🔗 ASAP IHeartRadio ❤️🔗  ASAP Amazon Music 🎵🔗  ASAP Apple Podcast 🍎🔗 ASAP Pathway MEMBERSHIP OPTIONS, LEARNING and COURSES BELOW ⬇️ 🙌 Join The Practice Breakfast Club! ☕️🔗 2026 ASAP Mini-Residency Pathway 🙌🔗 WANT TO BE A MEMBER IN ASAP Pathway?  ASAP Membership Options BELOW: 🎉👇 ASAP Immersion Membership🔗 OR Comprehensive ASAP Pathway Membership🔗

    1h 6m
  6. Ep. 71, From Cavities to Airway: Why Pediatric Dentistry Can’t Ignore Sleep, Dr. Rafif Tayara

    FEB 2

    Ep. 71, From Cavities to Airway: Why Pediatric Dentistry Can’t Ignore Sleep, Dr. Rafif Tayara

    🎙️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:  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-education + myofunctional therapy (and sometimes osteopathy) working together.Early expansion in primary dentition can be controversial—but momentum is shifting, with more clinicians adopting earlier approaches and airway screening increasingly discussed in pediatric guidelines.Practice model limitations are real (high-volume pediatric schedules, limited time): screening tools and questionnaires can help capture key data without derailing workflow.The long game is prevention and simplification: early work can reduce the intensity of later “phase 2” ortho and, in some cases, make it minimal. This is the ASAP Pathway Podcast, Airway, Sleep, and Pediatric Pathway, where sleep and airway health take center stage, one breath at a time. VISIT: ASAP Pathway Please subscribe, share, and tune in to future episodes of how we can help children live their best lives, one breath, and restful night's sleep at a time. Don't miss this exciting launch into a world of knowledge and transformation.Because Kids Can't Wait... CLICK HERE To Find an ASAP Pathway ProviderCLICK HERE To Become an ASAP Pathway ProviderCLICK HERE FOR ASAP Pathway IN-PERSON COURSESCLICK HERE To See If Your Child Is At Risk!ASAP FREE GIFT AND E NEWSLETTERSUBCRIBE AND SHARE AT OUR OTHER PLATFORMS BELOW ASAP YouTube ▶️ 🔗 ASAP YouTube Music 🔗  ASAP on Spotify 🔗 ASAP IHeartRadio ❤️🔗  ASAP Amazon Music 🎵🔗  ASAP Apple Podcast 🍎🔗 ASAP Pathway MEMBERSHIP OPTIONS, LEARNING and COURSES BELOW ⬇️ 🙌 Join The Practice Breakfast Club! ☕️🔗 2026 ASAP Mini-Residency Pathway 🙌🔗 WANT TO BE A MEMBER IN ASAP Pathway?  ASAP Membership Options BELOW: 🎉👇 ASAP Immersion Membership🔗 OR Comprehensive ASAP Pathway Membership🔗

    53 min
  7. Ep.70, How Orthodontics Impacts the Whole Patient, Dr. Jackie Demko

    JAN 26

    Ep.70, How Orthodontics Impacts the Whole Patient, Dr. Jackie Demko

    🎙️In this episode Dr. Stacy sits down with orthodontist Dr. Jackie Demko for an honest, experience-driven conversation about airway, growth, and the realities clinicians face when patients don’t fit neatly into traditional timelines or treatment silos. Dr. Demko shares how her clinical perspective has evolved over time, what she began noticing in patients long before airway became a mainstream conversation, and why so many individuals struggle to get clear answers when dentistry and medicine fail to communicate. Together, they explore patterns seen repeatedly in real patients, the long-term impact of delayed intervention, and why listening carefully often reveals more than any single test or protocol. This episode blends clinical insight with patient-centered reality, offering perspective for providers and patients alike who are navigating complex airway, growth, and sleep-related concerns. IG: Demko Orthodontics FB: Demko Orthodontics TIKTOK: Dr Demko Articles Mentioned in this Episode: ⬇️ A Rationale for Expansion Dr. Michael Owen Wiliams, DDS Dr. Larry W White, DMD, MS Beyond the Ligament: A “Whole Bone” Approach to Dentofacial Orthopedics and Falsification of Universal Alveolar Immutability © Neal C. Murphy, DDS, MS 1.2 And Michael O. Williams, DDS, MS3 A special private publication for the American Association of Orthodontists 107th Annual Meeting Seattle, Washington USA May 19-21, 2007 Ortho Tribune, Interview: Advances in NonSurgical Transverse Dimension Development and Tissue Engineering for Long-Term Cosmetic Results Interview with: Dr Michael Williams ⏱️ CHAPTERS: 01:05 – Introducing Dr. Jackie Demko and Her Clinical Background 04:20 – How Jackie’s Perspective on Airway Began to Change 08:45 – Patterns She Kept Seeing in Patients Over Time 13:30 – When “Wait and Watch” Doesn’t Serve the Patient 18:40 – Why Patients Get Conflicting Answers Between Providers 24:15 – Growth, Function, and the Consequences of Delay 30:05 – What Experience Teaches That Training Often Doesn’t 36:20 – The Importance of Asking Better Questions 42:50 – Collaboration: What’s Missing and What’s Possible 49:10 – Putting the Patient at the Center of Decision-Making 55:40 – Final Reflections and Why These Conversations Matter 🧠 Key Learnings: Clinical experience often reveals patterns long before literature catches upPatients are frequently caught between specialties without coordinated careDelaying intervention can carry long-term functional and developmental costs“Normal” timelines don’t apply equally to every patientListening closely often reveals problems before imaging or diagnostics doCollaboration improves outcomes more than rigid adherence to protocolsPatient-centered care requires flexibility, humility, and communication This is the ASAP Pathway Podcast, Airway, Sleep, and Pediatric Pathway, where sleep and airway health take center stage, one breath at a time. VISIT: ASAP Pathway Please subscribe, share, and tune in to future episodes of how we can help children live their best lives, one breath, and restful night's sleep at a time. Don't miss this exciting launch into a world of knowledge and transformation.Because Kids Can't Wait... CLICK HERE To Find an ASAP Pathway ProviderCLICK HERE To Become an ASAP Pathway ProviderCLICK HERE FOR ASAP Pathway IN-PERSON COURSESCLICK HERE To See If Your Child Is At Risk!ASAP FREE GIFT AND E NEWSLETTERSUBCRIBE AND SHARE AT OUR OTHER PLATFORMS BELOW ASAP YouTube ▶️ 🔗 ASAP YouTube Music 🔗  ASAP on Spotify 🔗 ASAP IHeartRadio ❤️🔗  ASAP Amazon Music 🎵🔗  ASAP Apple Podcast 🍎🔗 ASAP Pathway MEMBERSHIP OPTIONS, LEARNING and COURSES BELOW ⬇️ 🙌 Join The Practice Breakfast Club! ☕️🔗 2026 ASAP Mini-Residency Pathway 🙌🔗 WANT TO BE A MEMBER IN ASAP Pathway?  ASAP Membership Options BELOW: 🎉👇 ASAP Immersion Membership🔗 OR Comprehensive ASAP Pathway Membership🔗

    59 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
9 Ratings

About

In a world where discussions about sleep and airway issues dominate the dental landscape, the journey to understanding and addressing these concerns has evolved drastically. Join us as we dive into the remarkable transformation of dental care over the last decade, from overlooking airway and sleep health to making it a core aspect of treatment planning. Join us as we uncover the journey of understanding and addressing sleep and airway concerns in children. Whether you're a dedicated Dentist seeking comprehensive guidance, a health care provider wanting to collaborate and Find a Provider to work with, or a concerned Parent evaluating your child's well-being, our podcast sheds light on a clear pathway forward. To take the next step, become a member of our community or access valuable resources for your child's evaluation. Visit our website now and be a part of the positive change! https://asappathway.com/

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