I don't think you should be giving him his cereal out of a bottle anyway.
At 8 weeks, he most likely still has a thrust reflex and won't be able to take food off of the spoon. Most pediatricians will recommend that you not feed your child cereal until 3 to 4 months of age, depending on when they lose their thrust reflex.
If your son is showing signs of being hungry, (and not bored) you can feed him up to 32 oz of formula in a 24 hour period. If your son is going through a growth spurt, he may need the extra food, but adding cereal into his bottle isn't the best way to go about giving him what he needs.
As always, before making a major change to your infant's diet you should ask your pediatrician.
2006-08-20 11:42:02
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answer #1
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answered by InAMoment 3
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I do not think it will prove to be of any benefit to you or your baby to do that. I was always told never to put anything extra in my daughters formula, always did more harm than good. You need to wait until 6 months of age when you can SPOON FEED your baby the cereal and for now, just deal with having a newborn who is hungry and eats numerous times a day-like millions of other moms out there.
Studies show that there is no change in the amount of time that a baby will sleep if cereal is put into the bottle. The presumption is that the extra calories from the cereal will help the baby feel full for a longer period of time, and thus not wake up so soon to be fed. Others suggest that the slight thickening of the formula that occurs when adding cereal will allow the formula to stay in the stomach longer and thus the baby won't have an empty stomach quite so soon. However, a teaspoon of infant cereal has only 5 calories. A 4-ounce bottle of formula has 80 calories, so an extra teaspoon of cereal is a negligible contribution. And there is no significant change in how quickly the stomach empties with that small an amount of cereal. While solid foods in general take longer to be digested, this is really not applicable to infant cereal.
2006-08-20 11:19:07
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answer #2
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answered by LoveMyPitBull84 2
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i think you should ASK THE BABY'S DOCTOR. It's not a good ideal to go against doctors advice. Doctor set a time 4 introducing cereal for valid reasons. If your baby is bigger then average eating more then they should, you need to ask the doctor what is the best THING TO DO. My kids NEVER had cereal until 12 weeks only a TINY bit A FEW TEASPOONS once a day in the morning. People all to often over feed a baby which can lead to having a 40 pound 3 year old with breathing problems. Cereal has been PROV EN TIME AND TIME again not to help sleep and in fact can cause a baby to be more restless and colicky and full of painful belly gas that will not help with sleep!
2006-08-20 11:42:29
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answer #3
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answered by ally'smom 5
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We dont advise cereals before 4 months of age for reasons that the baby's digestive is still not mature enough. Digestive problems will set in later on. Milk is the main sustenance at this age, he may seem hungry for reasons that they have a small digestive system and cant handle enough. That's why they are usually fed at first, 2 oz every 2 hours and as they grow older to more than 8 weeks or so you can increase the feeding to 3-4 oz every 2 hours, eventually the intervals will be greater to every 3 hours as they mature. Then when they start their solids at 4-6 months milk is still their main sustenance until they can handle solids very well later on.
2006-08-20 14:06:14
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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In my opinion, yes, it's way too soon. I wouldn't give a baby cereal in their milk until *at least* six months. The more time the baby's digestive system has to mature, the better they'll be able to digest things other than milk (or formula, if you must), and the less worry you'll go through with your baby having digestive problems. Babies sleep longer after being fed cereal (I'm assuming that's why you fed it to him at night) because their body has to use so much more energy to work at digesting it.
Also, he probably is hungry more often because at six weeks, babies start having a bit of a growth spurt, which lasts for a while. This happens at certain increments (approximately 3 weeks, 6 weeks, 3 months, 6 months, and 9 months), and the need for more energy to 'power' the growing makes them hungrier.
2006-08-20 11:36:14
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answer #5
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answered by ChiChi 6
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dont feed baby cereal out of a bottle ever. and the best thing to do right now is feed straight formula. try to wait until at least 4-6 months for cereals etc. and keep baby on formula till 1 year old. so less chance of having allergies. baby will stay full on formula. he just needs more or more often.
2006-08-20 13:38:42
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answer #6
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answered by rakisup 2
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Giving a tender infant which a lot cereal can deliver about malnutrition. Breastmilk extraordinarily, yet formulation to boot, have each and every little thing a touch one needs till a minimum of 6 months of age. in the experience that they could take cereal from a spoon you could initiate that round six months. Any before than that may set your infant up for a number of the topics different people have said. the major situation, i think, with putting all that cereal in a bottle, is they received't be as in all probability to get each and every of the foodstuff they particularly want from breastmilk or formulation. Rice and oatmeal are actually nutrient-loose ingredients. Even the fortified cereals at the prompt are not actual digested to their fullest quantity in a touch one which youthful, and feeding them watery rice cereal will purely tell them they are finished which will in turn ward off that infant from taking in sufficient breastmilk/formulation. Cereal is low-priced because there is little nutritional fee. Please make sure your infant is getting a minimum of as a lot bm/formulation as they want. shop the cereal for later even as little you could take it from a spoon.
2016-11-05 06:21:03
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answer #7
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answered by ? 4
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Dr.s say 3-4 months should be good and they also say not to mix in the cereal in the bottle, so they wont get used to the texture. Give the cereal in a bowl with spoon then milk in bottle by itself. But not all Dr.s say the same thing. Check with your childs pediatrician.
2006-08-20 11:57:28
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answer #8
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answered by faithsmami 1
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A baby this age should not be getting cereal.
You start cereal at 4-6 mos on a SPOON and not in a bottle.
Starting solids too early puts your child at risk for allergies, asthma, diabetes, respiratory illness, etc.
2006-08-20 11:50:53
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answer #9
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answered by momma2mingbu 7
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You need to wait until he can eat from a spoon! Do you eat your cereal through a bottle?? Maybe you should call your pediatrician and ask him/her when to start, or you can ask at your childs next WellBaby Visit.
2006-08-20 17:37:23
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answer #10
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answered by deputyswife 3
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