Tag-Archive for » sick baby «

Jun
18

Ok, the title implies more than there really is.  But we did decide that we wanted to try treating the reflux, and Daphne’s pediatrician was good with that plan, so she now gets baby Zantac twice a day.  I’m not thrilled to be using pharmaceuticals on her, but having her be somewhere between uncomfortable and pissed off after every meal is only setting us up for nursing strikes in a couple months.  And we also did a pumped feeding – Jason gave her a bottle at the kitchen table while I pumped at the kitchen table (a little surreal), but it was *totally* the right thing to do – my nipples felt so much better the next time she nursed!  And we got in with the physical therapist on a canceled appointment next Tuesday.

Seems like life with a baby moves much slower – I’m either feeding her or holding her, so not much gets done when I’m on my own.  But I did have two classes to teach on Wednesday, and we’ll see if the 6am class that takes place at the Y is going to continue to be on my calendar.  She was quite hungry when I got home, and Jason was NOT happy that he didn’t remember what time class ended.  (We won’t mention that I’ve been teaching this class for almost a year. 😉 )  And both classes I’ve taught at home have had her eating right at the end of class.  I do hope that will get better, but this is one of the tradeoffs with teaching out of your house to reduce costs. 🙂

Jun
16

while I don’t remember what spurred it, I ended up doing some online research about overactive letdown yesterday. basically, the thought is that some moms have some combination of either too much milk getting stored in their breasts and/or the milk that is there is ejected from the ducts very forcefully. this can cause a number of issues. baby gags or gulps her food down, taking a lot of air with it, leading to burping and spitting up. baby fills her stomach too quickly, which leaves her uncomfortable after eating and more prone to reflux. baby fills up on a larger quantity of lactose-rich foremilk, rather than fat-rich hind milk, causing her to eat more often (for calories) and possibly get gassy from insufficient lactase enzyme. mom may notice pain during letdown too and significant leaking from one side while feeding on the other. well, we have all of those things. there are some other signs that we don’t have, so I’m suspecting that it’s not a hugely overactive letdown, but it’s there.

frustratingly, I probably contributed to the problem. for a few days, we were worried about low supply, so I supplemented with fenugreek. (regular readers may remember exactly why we did this, but, even though it was only two or three weeks ago, I certainly don’t!) that clearly wasn’t necessary, and I did stop after about two or three days. and then last weekend, I had two days notice to pump enough milk for two extra feeds, telling my boobs, over the course of two days, to produce a total of what was probably 54 oz, instead of 48oz. that’s a nontrivial difference!

in an attempt to deal with this issue, in the hopes of reducing Daphne’s reflux and/or gassyness, I’m attempting the standard first approach to the problem – stop feeding both sides each time she eats, and offer one side for an extended time, offering the other only if she decided she’s still hungry after seemingly finishing the first. of course, I don’t have fill lines on my boobs, so “after finishing the first” is as much educated guess work as anything else. basically, after she has gotten a couple (3 or 4) good rapid swallow sequences down (appears to coincide with multiple letdowns, another overactive letdown sign), and is just comfort sucking for a while, if she hasn’t fallen asleep or come of herself (or tried to), I take her off. as much as I rely on those signs, though, I’m also watching the clock; our (new) normal feeds have generally been 20 to 30 minutes. I figure that she has to work a little harder for food now, so I encourage her to stay on the same side for at least 20 minutes. I’ll giver her the other side only if she seems hungry after initially coming off one side and seeming relatively content, and is she’s stayed on that first side for 20 minutes.

yesterday afternoon was the first time I tried this. I only got two iterations in (each side twice) before the first (expected) night feeding. it seemed to be going well during the day, going about two hours between feeds (finish to start), which isn’t abnormal during the day. but then there were two more feeds an hour apart, and when I first gave her both sides before her expected long nap, it was just two and a half hours until she ate again. we got a longer three and a half hour break after that, but then again two and a half and one and a half for the next two feeds.

it hadn’t seemed to make an obvious difference in fussyness, but it’s hard to say since her daytime and nighttime fussiness levels are diffeent. she’s certainly still showing subtle silent reflux symptoms and gas symptoms. it does, however, mean more unproductive sucking at one breast than she had been doing in a while, and since she’s still compressing my nipple, it’s making things more raw and painful.

after talking to Jason, with neither of us seeing any real improvement in reflux or gassyness, but seeing bruising coming up on my nipples, we think we’re going to abandon this experiment (yes, I know it wasn’t for long, but my nipples are well guarded assets at the moment). as we’ve been talking about for the past week, though, we are going to look into treating her reflux for a while, and see if that helps things. my midwife noted that often treating reflux early means not having to treat it as long, and I’m hopeful that is the case.

such a puzzle! and not the fun, exciting kind.