In a rush so addressing a couple of posts in one...
Can anyone provide me with internet links to websites supportive of healthy
> infant feeding in Korean?
I've found this and would love to know of other resources...
http://www.mhcs.health.nsw.gov.au/mhcs/topics/Pregnancy_and_Post_Natal.html#7595
Good morning. I need some help with a current situation and the mother
> involved has given me permission to post.
>
> Mom with twins 10 days old
>
> Symptoms over weekend:
>
> Slight pain when feeding
> Intense "shooting" pain after feeding
> Nipples bilateral unremarkable
> No redness on breast
> Mom reports "clumps" in breast milk
> Clumps 1" long "stringy"
> Yellow mucus appears to coat nipple after pumping (mom describes as
> "yellow
> snot")
>
> Symptoms over last 24 hours:
>
> General aches and pains
> Clumping discontinued
> Still no visible redness on breast
> Yellow mucus on nipples after pumping remains
>
>
Need more info...
Is mom's temperature normal or high?
What were babies' gestational age at birth? How has milk been removed --
babies only, babies and milk expression/pump, or milk expression/pump only?
If using a breast pump, which type -- rental or personal -- and do flanges
"fit" correctly? How often is/was milk removed via babies and/or milk
expression?
Dear Dr. Leeper:
>
> I enjoy your posts and so wish that you could be cloned!
>
> Is this narrow ventaire bottle you describe different to the vent-aire
> bottle that is sold?
>
> warmly,
>
> Nikki Lee RN, MS, Mother of 2, IBCLC, CCE, CIMI
> craniosacral therapy practitioner
> www.myspace.com/adonicalee
>
>
> Thanks, Nikki. There are many days when I wish I could be cloned, too!
>
> No---I just say "narrow" to differentiate it from the "wide-mouthed"
> version
> of the ventaire bottle.
>
> Even though they are both "Stage 1" and "slow-flow", we find the
> wide-mouthed actually flows much faster. And while this bottle is not
> perfect by any means, it can be used as a tool to promote sucking in a kid
> who is chewing. But it is the slowest one out there (that I know of) so
> NOT
> a good choice for sleepy newborns who might give up before they get fed.
> Often bigger babies will be too impatient with the flow to switch directly
> from a "regular" bottle to this one, but moms can often feed them
> "half-way"
> with their regular bottle, then let them play with the ventaire to figure
> it
> out.
>
> Kathy Leeper, MD, IBCLC
> Medical Director, MilkWorks
>
>
In the bottle nipple/teat trials we did using a breast pump under a
systematic process using suction pressure in newborn range, the level/stage
1 newborn Playtex VentAire was slower -- may actually be TOO slow for many
newborns experiencing disorganized suckling. However, for a baby who
basically "has it" and has oral anatomy issues, it may be very appropriate
as per Dr. Leeper's experience. I believe Lisa Sandora, MA, SLP-CCC, IBCLC,
one of our outpatient LCs who is co-investigator re: bottle teat trial,
finds the narrow or standard Dr. Brown is also an option for the baby with
the higher/channel/domed palate, which often goes with tongue tie.
--
Karen G
513-325-2550
www.karengromada.com/
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