English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

We took her off her medicine around 6 months because we thought it was over (our pedi okayed this) and now it seems she is night waking a lot, moaning in the night and displaying the same symptoms. I called the pedi and she said to go ahead and try her on Prilosec again, but I'm just wondering how common this is? She was a VERY good sleeper before and she seems perfectly healthy, but seems uncomfy sleeping flat.

2007-01-15 04:43:09 · 7 answers · asked by Kristi62870 1 in Pregnancy & Parenting Toddler & Preschooler

7 answers

My daughter is 14 months old. She is on Prevacid and Reglan. She also has her formula thickened with rice cereal. She has a G-tube and has had surgery called a Nissen fundoplication to help stop reflux. Good Luck.

2007-01-15 05:26:50 · answer #1 · answered by mommyofthree 3 · 0 1

My oldest daughter had GE Reflux along with Colic when she was 3 months old. Due to some doctors belief, you never grow out of having the reflux, it just seems to improve over time. My daughter is 6 yrs old now and still has problems ever once in a while. Never lay a child with reflux flat to sleep, they need to be elevated, invest in a wedge to put under her mattress, you will see an improvement in her sleep in a short amount of time.

My aunt just turned 50 and has had the reflux since she was a baby, and she has major problems with hers.

2007-01-15 05:28:16 · answer #2 · answered by sunflowerlizard 6 · 0 0

My 6 year old was put in the hospital with pneumonia when he was about 6 months. That is when they diagnosed him with reflux. He got pneumonia 3 more times due to the reflux. They ended up testing him for cystic fibrosis which thank goodness came back negative. He still has reflux now. Some kids do outgrow it but some don't. I hope yours does. Good luck.

2007-01-15 05:47:43 · answer #3 · answered by jessica c 2 · 0 0

My son is 7 mo old and has reflux. Contrary to what the experts say, he has slept on his stomach since he was born. Did your dr. have you put barley or oatmeal in with the formula? That greatly reduced my son's problems. 1 tsp of barley for every oz. of formula. Had to cut the nipple though.

Try to get off that medicine friend. Not good. Keep searching for answers - you'll find them.

Blessings,

2007-01-15 04:57:31 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

My daughter had the identical trouble and I took her into the ER relatively a couple of instances for it and so they all stated it used to be a viral contamination. I by no means idea it used to be when you consider that she might throw up randomly.. She might throw up possibly two times an afternoon, not anything the following two days, then throw up time and again. Eventually she stopped all in combination. I by no means acquired a directly reply. But to the character who stated "Babies don't end up lactose illiberal for a couple of years. Formula makers prey on mother and father' fears and deliver them "lactose unfastened" milk, that's product of low-priced, unsafe corn syrup." There IS actually a well cause why they make lactose unfastened method despite the fact that actual lactose illiberal indicators do not seem till grade university and even teenager years. But they make lactose unfastened method when you consider that a few infants do have indicators of intolerance to lactose, similar to fussiness, colic, and gasoline. But additionally so you realize, Because lactose-unfastened formulation are nonetheless made with milk—most effective the carbohydrate lactose is eliminated and changed with a extra digestible carbohydrate—they don't paintings for babies who're real allergic to take advantage of. He could also be allergic to a precise degree two meals you're giving him. Maybe a fruit, or anything different kinds you feed him. Also, he could also be allergic to a nutrient in milk. My sister had the identical trouble and needed to be placed on a wholly exclusive sort of method.

2016-09-07 23:07:14 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Yes it can take up to 2 years according to my sons gi specialist, he said 90% outgrow at age 12months, 95% by 2 years. My son is 16 months, severe gerd, failure to thrive.. he still says that he can outgrow it.
We have had more sucess with a ppi (prevacid) and a h2 blocker (axid) than with either alone.

have you tried the website www.infantrefluxdisease.com? its a great reference site, and support group!

2007-01-16 20:36:41 · answer #6 · answered by steveangela1 5 · 0 0

Have her tested for Pylori...

2007-01-15 04:50:24 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

fedest.com, questions and answers