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in order to keep my six month old from being constipated i have to feed her two servings of fruit and one of veggies a day all mixed with 2-3 tablespoons of prunes...it's all that has worked...i've tried: brown sugar in her bottle, karo syrup in her bottle, feeding her more fruits then veggies, i've tried everything and this is working great! BUT, we missed a feeding of the mixture and she became constipated and in order to fix it i put some food in her bottle with her formula because she was too fussy and impatient to eat it from a spoon, well now she won't finish her usual 6oz bottle of plain formula unless there's something in it, like baby food or juice.....HELP!!

2007-03-26 16:53:10 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Pregnancy & Parenting Newborn & Baby

5 answers

I switched from formula to goat's milk - we mixed up meyenberg's 1/2 strength and then dilluted it for new born at feeding time and increased the strength as baby seemed to get hungrier.

I can also tell you that I use Epsom salt in a bath for constipation and a great product with catnip and fennel in it (fennel tea has long been given to babies to help digestion) and we would put it on her tummy and feet when she got gassy or constipated and it worked a treat. Here's a link: http://www.mynsp.com/carole/products/guide.aspx?stockNum=3195

I would give that a try - then you can supplement with foods that don't have added prune juice and she can start to develop at taste for that which is not sweet or plain cereal.

Peace!

2007-03-26 17:05:56 · answer #1 · answered by carole 7 · 1 0

She will be fine if she doesn't finish her normal bottle. Kids at this age change their eating habits all the time. She might feel fuller longer now because shes eating more solids. Don't worry unless she starts losing weight. Otherwise just wait until shes good and hungry and tired, then give her that bottle.

2007-03-27 00:01:16 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Try starting her with juice in a cup to separate the bottle from food, then working your way back to a bowl and spoon. Also, is she teething? If she is it might be that it hurts to use the spoon and the nipple on the bottle is softer and more chewable.

2007-03-26 23:58:45 · answer #3 · answered by angelgirl_nephibabe 1 · 0 0

She has gotten used to "sweets" like fruit, karo syrup, brown sugar, etc.....

2007-03-26 23:56:28 · answer #4 · answered by sxysalsa 4 · 0 0

she may need that extra food in her bottel there is nothing wrong with putting cireal and the like in her formula. if she is conastpated here is what my "parenting bible" says to do

The following is Dr. Sears' ten-step plan for treating constipation:

Drink to go. Not drinking enough fluids is also a subtle contributor to problems with constipation, especially in the very young and very old. The colon is your body's fluid regulator. If you're not drinking enough, your colon steals water from the waste material and gives it to the body, causing the stools to be water deprived or hard. People eating high-fiber diets actually increase their risk of constipation if they don't drink extra water along with fiber-rich foods, since fiber needs water to do its intestinal sweeping job. More fluids in your diet put more fluids in your bowels, lessening constipation.

Add more fiber foods to child's diet. Fiber softens the stools by drawing water into them, making them bulkier and easier to pass. Fiber foods for older babies are bran cereals, graham crackers, whole-grain breads and crackers, and high-fiber vegetables such as peas, broccoli, and beans. (For a fiber-rich diet, see fiber foods.)

Get moving. Exercise improves digestion and speeds the passage of food through the intestines. A moving body gets the bowels moving, too.

Ease the passage of stools. Your infant may need a little outside help with a well-timed suppository. As they are going through a phase of learning how to have a bowel movement, many babies in their early months grunt and draw up their legs to push out a stool. But the straining baby may appreciate a little outside help with a well-timed, well-placed glycerin suppository. Available without prescription at your pharmacy, these look like tiny rocket ships. If your baby is straining, insert one as far into the rectum as you can and hold baby's buttocks together for a few minutes to dissolve the glycerin. These are especially helpful to lubricate the rectum if baby has a rectal tear or bleeding . Don't use for more than a few days without your doctor's advice.

Wiggle it out. As soon as you insert the glycerin suppository, wiggle it a bit, which stimulates the tense rectal muscles to relax and eases the passage of the hard stools.

Insert liquid glycerin. Liquid glycerin (Babylax) may be gently inserted by dropping it into baby's rectum, which often stimulates a bowel movement.

Use natural laxatives. When using a laxative, try the most natural first. Begin with diluted prune juice (with pulp), a tablespoon or two for the six- month-old and as much as eight ounces for the toddler. Try strained prunes or make a prune puree (stew your own or buy commercial), either straight or disguised (mixed with a favorite food), or spread it on a high-fiber cracker. Apricots and the four P's – prunes, pears, plums, and peaches – usually exert a laxative effect. If these seem insufficient, here are other ideas to try:

Psyllium husks (basically, very fine flakes of psyllium bran, available at nutrition stores) are a natural-fiber stool softener. This bland laxative is served sprinkled on cereal or combined with a fruit-and-yogurt mixture.
Dosage of psyllium:
Adults: Begin with one teaspoon and increase to one tablespoon once a day as needed.
Toddlers and children: Begin with one teaspoon a day and increase to two teaspoons a day as needed.

Be sure to take psyllium with an eight-ounce glass of water. For this concentrated fiber to work the intestines need lots of fluid; otherwise, psyllium can "gum up" in the intestines and actually increase the constipation. You can also mix psyllium powder in a smoothie. Psyllium is also available over-the-counter as Metamucil.


Nonprescription laxatives, such as Malt-supex (a malt-barley extract) or Metamucil (psyllium powder), may soften your child's stools.

Flax oil is a favorite. A healthy alternative to mineral oil is flax oil, which not only has laxative properties, but is a valuable source of omega 3 fats as well. (Although you may hear that mineral oil is a good oil to relieve constipation, because it is a mixture of hydrocarbons dried from petroleum products, I have never been convinced of its safety. And, unlike flax oil, it certainly has no nutritional benefits.) Unlike mineral oil, which slides through the intestines, possibly taking vitamins with it, flax oil is a nutrient that facilitates absorption of the vitamins.

Dosage of flax oil:
Infants: one teaspoon a day
Toddlers: two teaspoons a day
Children and adults: one tablespoon a day


Flax seed meal (ground flax seeds) is an even a better laxative than flax oil since it contains fiber. They look similar to finely ground bran flakes and mix well with soupy cereal, or even better, added to a high-fiber smoothie .

Dosage of flax seed meal:
Toddlers: one tablespoon a day
Older children and adults: two tablespoons a day


Stool-Ade - Make a smoothie. See Dr. Sears' School-Ade recipe which also doubles as Stool-Ade. An easy way to get lots of fiber and laxative foods into your child is by making a stool-softening smoothie


Over-the-counter suppositories. Besides glycerin suppositories, try glycerin suppositories that also include a laxative ingredient. These may be used periodically if the constipation is severe and resistant to the above simpler measures.


Use an enema as a last resort. Baby Fleet may be tried if your toddler is miserably constipated and nothing else is working. It is available without prescription, and directions are on the package insert.

CONSTIPATION IN INFANTS UNDER A YEAR
In addition to the above general tips for preventing and treating constipation at all ages, try these infant-specific tips:
If formula-feeding, experiment with different formulas to find which one is most intestinal-friendly.
Feed baby smaller amounts of formula more frequently, which gives the intestines a better chance to properly digest the formula. An easier rule of thumb is to feed half as much twice as often.
Delay introduction of solid foods, especially more constipating ones, such as rice and bananas. Instead of rice cereal, try barley cereal. Good starter high-fiber foods for constipated infants are pureed pears and prunes.
Ease the passage of stools using glycerin suppositories or liquid glycerin (as described above).
Add one teaspoon of flax oil once a day mixed into baby cereal or baby's bottle.
Watch for about-to-go signs. As soon as your baby begins to grunt, grimace, look bloated, or show signs of straining, quickly insert a glycerin suppository to ease the passage.
The Bath and Bowel Movement Technique
Here is a Sears' family trick that helped us ease the passage of stools in several of our constipated babies. Although it's messy, it works. Immerse your baby in a warm bath so that the water is around chest-high. When your baby is relaxed in the bath, massage baby's abdomen and get ready for the mudslide.

2007-03-26 23:59:04 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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