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Date: | Wed, 29 Sep 2010 14:59:22 -0400 |
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Dehydration probably didn't help. When BG was posted at 38 she should have
nursed again. Why do we think formula is more magic? Pat in SNJ
> As both a diabetes educator and lactation consultant, I ran into an
> interesting situation this morning. I have the parents' permission to
> post. The newborn (12-24 hours of age) of a first-time mom via C-section,
> breastfeeding very well, multiple times in first 12 hours, was jittery and
> had blood glucose of 38 mg/dl. Baby was given to mom to breastfeed and BG
> rechecked in about 1 hour. BG only at 39 mg/dl so baby was given formula.
> BG continued to be between 40 and 55 mg/dl for next several hours. Baby
> continued to breastfeed and symptoms were no longer present about 6 hours
> later and BG monitoring was stopped. Mom was noted to have very
> concentrated urine, lost about 700 cc during delivery. She did not have
> abnormal BG's during pregnancy, but reports she has difficulty with
> reactive hypoglycemia. My questions are what is the carbohydrate content
> of colostrum; was the volume of colostrum compromised by the mother's
> state of dehydration?
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