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Breastfeeding a Baby with Gastroesophageal Reflux
Breastfeeding Is Nature's Antacid
Advice for New Moms
By Gwen Morrison
Breast milk not only provides the appropriate nourishment to ensure a child's optimal health and development in the early years, breast milk can be a means of comfort for babies with gastroesophageal reflux (GER).
In adults, GER is easily recognized as heartburn, but babies can just end up uncomfortable and miserable. "Some babies spit up; others cry or act as if they are in pain," says Dr. White. "Physicians used to dismiss these symptoms as colic, something which they could not explain and parents just had to survive. Now they believe that at least some of the cases of unexplained, inconsolable crying may actually be reflux."
Diagnosing GER can also be difficult because the symptoms can be different for each child. Frequent burping, spitting up or projectile vomiting are some of the more common symptoms of reflux, but there are others. If a baby is not gaining weight, having difficulty swallowing, nursing constantly or has a total disinterest in nursing altogether for an extended period of time, it should be looked at more closely by a medical professional.
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