Background/Objectives: Orofacial myofunctional therapy (OMT) is a system of targeted neuromuscular exercises and behavioral retraining intended to optimize tongue, lip, jaw, and airway function during rest, breathing, swallowing, and sleep. Historically associated with tongue thrust and abnormal swallowing, OMT is now applied across an expanding range of clinical contexts, including sleep-disordered breathing (SDB), tongue-tie rehabilitation, orthodontic stability, and perioperative functional recovery. As its use has broadened, persistent questions have followed: what is myofunctional therapy, where did it originate, and how did a set of oral exercises evolve into an intervention increasingly integrated with airway health, sleep medicine, and surgical care? Methods: This article presents a narrative historical review with a perspective component, synthesizing foundational literature, interdisciplinary contributions, and selected contemporary evidence to examine the evolution of OMT from ancient functional practices to modern clinical science. It is written to trace recurring clinical observations, shifts in educational frameworks, and key inflection points that shaped how OMT has been taught and applied over time. Results: OMT did not emerge from randomized controlled trials or standardized protocols. It arose from repeated clinical encounters with patients with atypical craniofacial development, relapse of structural correction, persistent mouth breathing, and/or unresolved swallowing and speech dysfunction despite technically successful treatment. These patterns suggested that anatomy alone could not account for outcome variability. Over time, clinical attention expanded beyond isolated tongue function to include breathing patterns, posture, neuromuscular tone, and airway behavior. In the past two decades, controlled trials, cohort studies, and systematic reviews have supported selected applications of OMT, particularly in SDB and adjunctive airway care, while also revealing ongoing challenges related to training variability, terminology, scope of practice, and standardization. Conclusions: OMT has historically been described as a system of targeted neuromuscular and behavioral interventions aimed at modifying orofacial rest posture and function. Over time, the field has expanded beyond localized muscle retraining toward a broader functional framework that integrates airway physiology, craniofacial growth, sleep, and interdisciplinary rehabilitation.
Zaghi et al. (Fri,) studied this question.