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11 answers

You shouldn't give him anything...call the DR especially because he is a premie

2006-11-23 18:20:40 · answer #1 · answered by yourpassionprofessional 1 · 1 2

No. at the starting up, why do you imagine he's constipated? it really is common for children to grunt and rigidity and bypass pink contained in the face and pull their legs to their chests or perhaps cry even as having a bowel flow, and it does no longer advise they are constipated. And a breastfed toddler could have 12 poopy diapers in an afternoon, or bypass 7 days with out one. both way is common. formulation-fed children may also bypass days with out a bowel flow with out concerns. Constipation is clinically determined surely by the consistency of the stool. Pellets--round, problematical poops--are what you situation about. Our pediatrician suggested that constipation isn't that worry-free, and that we shouldn't provide juice or castor oil or something like that to bring about a bowel flow. If we were truly confident that our daughters had a situation, we were informed to take a rectal temperature. The tender stimulation commonly induces a flow. (Dehydration can take position truly right now in a toddler that youthful, so that you do not pick to do something which could carry about diarrhea.)

2016-11-29 10:15:37 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

at 2 months, it is relatively safe to give some juices. when my children were that young and had constipation, I would give them some prune juice. gerber has very small bottles of juices, and the great thing about the is that a bottle cap will fit over it just fine so the baby can drink from the nipple. try giving yours a small amount of baby prune juice, it will help push the BM along, you can also try feeding your baby a little bit of baby applesauce. I know doctors say not to feed jar foods until a certain age, but I fed mine cereal at 2 weeks and jar food at 2 months. They are tall and healthy, and very smart..

2006-11-23 19:01:23 · answer #3 · answered by TaureanAngel 4 · 0 1

Call your Ped. about sepositories and diet reccomendations.

In the meantime, try laying the baby on his back. Grasping his calves, bring his knees up to his belly/chest and then back down repeatedly (kind of like stomach crunches)

This movement may help the bowels loosen up a bit.

2006-11-23 18:30:32 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

My son was a preemie and used to get horribly constipated because of the milk-based formula the nurses were mixing with the breast milk I was pumping for him and they would use suppositories.

2006-11-23 18:28:43 · answer #5 · answered by Ryan's mom 7 · 0 0

I gave my son a little brown sugar (about a teaspoon in a bottle of water or mixed in with his formula) it always worked. He wasn't a preemie but he did have a heart murmur and I was told to try it.

2006-11-23 18:26:26 · answer #6 · answered by emmandal 4 · 0 1

Karo syrup one teaspoon and an oz of water

2006-11-23 22:14:15 · answer #7 · answered by jess 2 · 0 0

call a 24 hour pharmacy and talk to a pharmacist, they are always helpful, and if they think your doctor should be called they will let you know, good luck.

2006-11-23 18:20:18 · answer #8 · answered by sylvie11us 1 · 0 0

Give him pedyalite and next time watch out for things like that for two months and stopped up is a stopped up Mother if you ask me,

2006-11-23 18:19:58 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

Digital disimpactment...Highly unpleasent but sometimes very necessary.

2006-11-23 18:23:33 · answer #10 · answered by RoninShonen 5 · 0 0

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