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Date: | Sat, 21 Feb 2009 10:29:05 +0000 |
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>Can anyone answer a question for me? Is it possible for a baby
>wiith severe hypernatraemic dehydration, say with nearly 25% weight
>loss, to be passing normal quantities of normal urine? Thus
>throwing to the winds the normal advice for a mother to count wet
>nappies/diapers as a way to know her baby is taking in enough
>breastmilk. I've just heard of 2 such cases and I'm wondering what
>could have happened.
>
>This really bothers me because it seems so unlikely and I've been
>asked to comment to a healthcare professional.
>
>My knee-jerk reaction would be to think that a baby breastfeeding so
>seldom, or so infrequently as to have become dehydrated might
>suddenly have been fed a large quantity of formula, so causing
>hypernatraemia.
>
>Can anyone come up with a likely explanation??
>
>Many thanks if you can help.
>
>Pamela Morrison IBCLC
>Rustington, England
My understanding is that not urinating is a very late stage - I have
come across a number of babies who were admitted for HD, with serious
weight loss, and it was only the one with the massive weight loss
(sticks in my mind because I wrote her up as a formal case study)
where there was noticably less urine.
I have come across a number of mothers who were worried about the
baby's intake, and were told 'as long as he is weeing, he is fine'
and the babies were *not* *fine*.
I think one issue is that it is impossible with today's
super-absorbent nappies to estimate urine loss - the trick of putting
in a cloth or a cotton wool ball inside to show up urine loss helps a
bit, but I have no idea how this would be counted in 'voids'. Two or
three urinations could happen in between nappy changes!
It's sensible I think to watch for a 'heavy' nappy - in the sheet I
co-wrote for NCT on 'what's in a nappy?' we encourage mothers to look
for 'heavy' nappies, and to test what one should feel like by placing
water from a spoon into a dry nappy and then lifting it. I am sure
hardly anyone would do this though ;)
All the babies with HD treated in hospital have had the same symptom
though - lack of stooling. And this is easy to spot, and easy to
monitor by counting.
Lack of stooling happens before lack of urination.
Heathetr Welford Neil
NCT bfc, tutor, UK
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