One can sometimes see this constellation in a baby who has trouble with
milk flow. The bubble palate points to the presence of some tongue
restriction, perhaps a posterior tongue tie. Sometimes infants with
posterior tongue ties have more difficulty grooving the tongue than
those with more obvious ties. As a result of the poor grooving, bolus
control is imperfect, and the baby may aspirate. This is so painful,
some babies start refusing to eat.
Signs that this might be the issue:
-increasing congestion throughout and after oral feeding.
-poorly timed respirations in relation to swallowing - isolated stridor
caused by closure of the vocal folds when liquids contact them; gasping
respirations after swallowing several times, etc
(you can get a really good idea what's happening with the swallow by
listening with a stethescope over baby's throat or under the chin, which
is called cervical auscultation. If you get used to listening to some
infants that feed well and hear the one distinct sound of a clear, well
managed swallow, you can learn to recognize incomplete clearing
(multiple swallows needed to clear the pharynx) and poor coordination of
swallowing and breathing).
If this does not seem to be the issue, perhaps there is sensory issue
(though the hyper gag is commonly seen in infants with tongue
restriction and palatal anomalies), or perhaps an anatomic respiratory
issue such as velopharyngeal insufficiency, which can cause nasal reflux
and lead to feeding resistence.
Sometimes the feeding resistence can be overcome by allowing the baby
more control - offer the breast often but make no attempt to put the
baby "on" the breast, let her latch or not latch.
Distraction is often helpful with 5 mo olds, play with some novel toys
near the bare breast, and see if bringing her defenses down allows her
to latch.
Maintaining a good milk supply is helpful, but if baby has difficulty
handling milk flow, she might prefer the breast be partly pumped.
Allow her to come off the breast whenever she wants, make sure mom is
not holding her head. A good position is mom supine and baby prone on
mom's chest. They can nap that way in bed or on the floor to help baby
feel safe and make the breast available.
If none of this helps, Marsha Dunn Klein is an occupational therapist in
Tucson, AZ who is skilled in getting to the bottom of and helping with
feeding refusal. Her website is http://mealtimenotions.com/ . She is a
lovely, gentle, and skilled woman, who understands the emotional
importance of feeding and trusts that babies and children have reasons
for their decisions about feeding.
Catherine Watson Genna, IBCLC NYC
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