

| NAME: |
Michelle |
| BABY'S NAME: |
Whitney |
| BABY'S AGE: |
10 weeks |
| BABY'S PRESENT WEIGHT: |
11 lbs |
| BABY'S BIRTH WEIGHT:
|
7lbs, 10oz |
I have been breastfeeding ever since
Whitney was born. She had no trouble latching on from the
beginning. She has extreme gas and cramps constantly. I really
try to watch what I eat. In fact I went on a very mild diet which
consists of baked turkey, boiled potatoes, or plain rice, rice
pasta, pears and green zucchini.
The doctor says she is colicky. I want to to continue to breastfeed, but she wants to eat
every hour to hour and a half. This leaves me no time to pump. Therefore, there are times
that I give her formula. The formula is lactose free and hypoallergenic. This also seems
to give her extreme gas and pain. She only finds comfort when I nurse and hold her. I
cannot get anything done around the house or for myself (shower). She cries constantly.
What can I do to help ease her pain, and get things done around the house? I have tried a
swing, sling, snugglie pack, vibrating bouncy chair, stroller, and even
driving in the car. Nothing seems to comfort her. Any Advice?
Thanks for listening.

Dear Michelle,
15 years ago, I lived through the very same thing you are going through right now, so I
can sure empathize with you! My Lin-z was never happy unless she was in my arms and/or at
the breast. I used a sling pretty much around the clock--and that was before they made the
newer more lightweight slings. My baby was born at the end of May and it was hot with that
thing on during the hot sticky Alabama summer! Lin-z, also, was not soothed by swings or
driving in the car. In fact, I dreaded having to put her in the car everyday to pick up my
other child from school. It was a 40 minute trip with Lin-z screaming all the way! I still
shudder when I think of it. I was usually crying myself by the time we got home.
If the bland diet you are now living on has not helped the symptoms, then there is no
reason to be on it! The most likely diet-related cause of colic in breastfeeding women is
dairy products. I would recommend taking out all dairy , which it sounds like you've
already done (be sure to read labels) for 2 weeks and see what happens.
For more than half the women I suggest this to, it is very helpful. If this does help,
then by all means put the other foods back into your diet gradually. Then begin putting
milk products back also. Begin with the solid forms like cheese and yogurt. Unfortunately
for me there weren't any lactation consultants 15 years ago (at least here in Montgomery)
so I didn't know about this. The pediatricians I went to all told me to "just put her
on formula." That was never an answer I wanted to hear, so I continued to breastfeed
with the support of my friends that I found at La Leche League meetings. Most meetings
found me in the kitchen because Lin-z was usually crying and I didn't want to disturb the
others. I often wondered what was wrong with me--all the other moms were in there lovingly
nursing their babies and I was in the kitchen with a very unhappy baby. It was an
extremely trying time...
The medications they have for colic can be very effective, but I am finding that women are
reluctant to use them because they don't want to "drug" their babies. These
medications have no side effects--all they do is break up gas bubbles--so they are very
safe. If you wait until your baby is screaming in pain, they are not effective. They need
to be used ahead of time or sometimes even around the clock. Again, this is something my
doctor failed to tell me. So, I tried the drops a couple of times, found they didn't work,
and quit using them. If only I could go back and do it again!
One thing that helped Lin-z was a baby hot-water bottle. Drug stores should have these. We
put the hot-water bottle (with warm water--not hot) on our laps, put Lin-z's tummy on the
hot water bottle, and it really helped her. Also, my husband would hold her upright firmly
against his body, sit on the end of our bed, and gently bounce up and down. Nothing worked
better than that. We discovered that colicky babies prefer an up and down motion to back
and forth. Rocking was never effective--I guess that's why the car and swing didn't really
work. But that's also why the sling worked so well as long as I was walking!
One other suggestion, try this for about 3-5 days and see if it helps. It often does.
Nurse your baby on only one side for a given period of time. She can nurse as many times
as she needs to during that time period but only use that one breast. For example: 6am -
10 am, nurse right breast only; 10am - 2 pm, nurse left breast only. If you experience any
discomfort in the breast that is not being nursed, express just enough milk to ease the
discomfort and no more. After about 2-3 days your body will adjust to this schedule and
you should not experience anymore fullness in between nursings.
I grinned inwardly when I read what you said about not even being able to get a shower.
When Lin-z was born, I was used to getting a morning shower. All that changed then because
I had to wait for my husband to get home so that I could take one. 15 years later, I still
take my shower at night! Now I wonder how I every went to sleep without it! So, you are
certainly not alone. Time will take care of the colic. And realize that colicky babies
almost always go on to be very healthy babies. I like to think of the analogy that morning
sickness goes along with a healthy pregnancy. Have you read Dr. Sear's book "The
Fussy Baby?" If not, then please do. It's wonderful--it changed my life!
Now I feel like I've been through a trip down memory lane! Hope this is helpful to you.
Cher Sealy, RN, BSN, IBCLC, LLLL

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