A couple of studies referenced on this page:
http://www.ameda.com/daily_feed/more-sleep-breastfeed
discuss that breastfeeding mothers may end up with more total sleep (of
course, this is assuming that she's still maintaining child-care duties,
and not turning the job over to someone else completely) and (which may
be very relevant to this particular mother) lactation seems to produce
more slow-wave sleep, the deepest, most restorative state. (Certainly a
lot of menopausal women feel they don't sleep as well as they did with
those little babies in the house).
It does seem that the labor, birth and a hospital stay would have been
such a disruptive sequence of events, and a strain on the body, that her
response to that shouldn't be taken as the model of what day-to-day
breastfeeding will be. Even mothers who don't have her special
circumstances find that the first few weeks are much more intense than
the whole rest of their breastfeeding career.
The current plan of nursing freely during the day, maybe with cluster
feeding in the evening leading up to bed, with the husband fielding the
night feedings for six hours, with her waking for one fifteen minute
pumping, seems like enough milk removal to establish the supply, and
might not be a bad place to start the process. It's helpful to convey
that in the circadian rhythms, the hormones that tell her body to make
milk are actually higher at night, and that the nighttime milk removals
are important for establishing the supply. If her condition is stable
with the current routine, and as the baby becomes more reliably
efficient, it may be less disruptive to keep the baby close at night,
and do a couple feedings laying down, with the husband fielding any
other baby care, such as diaper changes. Many mothers do a lot of
nursing without being fully awake.
Perhaps encouraging her to feed laying down throughout the day, since
getting naps and rest during the day may help her deal with the night
issues better.
Good luck to all.
Margaret Wills, IBCLC Maryland
Date: Sun, 11 Sep 2011 10:23:12 -0400 From: Pam MazzellaDiBosco
<[log in to unmask]> Subject: mother with epilepsy and managing sleep
Everytime I go away from Lactnet being busy with life, work, school,
whatever...something comes along that makes me have to pop back in. Then
I get started reading all the missed posts! I have to stop myself from
replying so I don't start living in Lactnet where my mind is happy and
gathering so much information. I have a mother who has epilepsy. I am
not seeing her until today, so do not know all her meds yet. However,
what she has been told by her neurologist is she cannot breastfeed at
night or care for her baby at night. That the lack of sleep will cause
seizures. Since we know breastfeeding is not the same as bottle feeding
for the maternal sleep patterns, is it possible that she could actually
breastfeed at night without causing the disruption in sleep that the
doctor is worried about? Dad said mom had a siezure in the hospital due
to lack of sleep, however, after hours of labor and lack of sleep
related to interruptions in the hospital on top of that, the comparison
does not seem to me to be the same thing. For now, they are focusing on
mom breastfeeding until she goes to bed at night, letting Dad do the
night feedings for 6 hours, mom waking to pump for 15 minutes and then
go back to sleep. She doesn't want to breastfeed because it takes longer
and she is afraid to be awake. Not even sure the 6 hours will be long
enough yet, but she will know in a few days. I searched Lactnet archives
and cannot find much about epilepsy at all, let alone how breastfeeding
affects it, sleep, etc. Anyone with information, please share and if
there is specific research I can share with parents, please pass along
that also. If possible, can you send a private reply also. Thank you,
Pam MazzellaDiBosco, IBCLC, RLC
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