The Comotomo or Nanobebe. They are silicone and more breast milk. My baby hated the long nipples and would gag on the Dr.Browns bottles. He preferred Comoto which has a shorter nipple and is more breast like. |
| Are you offering the breast often with/without the nipple shield or just the syringe? Is your milk good or does it taste or smell funny? Is it warm enough? I had latch issues because of flat nipples and working at it all day for a month helped. We had to use a syringe and bottle. He also did not like the nipple shield and refused it. He rejected the bottle at first at first until we realized he likes his milk very warm. He started latching and getting milk out well at 1 month. I would keep trying and give it more time. |
What do you suggest she does? If she stops syringe feeding that means he gets no milk. |
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To those who are suggesting formula: Have you seen the news lately?
Normally, I'd agree that if breastfeeding is not getting anywhere, then supplementing with formula is worth a try. However, with the formula supply crisis, OP is likely grateful that she is making enough milk. |
| I didn't have exactly this problem since my son did take a bottle, but it took about 4 weeks before he decided to latch to the breast. I had almost given up but I made sure to try several times a day. Sometimes, I think they just need to mature and grow a little bit before they get the hang of it. |
OP here. I will order some. |
OP here. I offer the breast at every feed or every other feed. I will sometimes start with the breast and let him eat what he can and other times I will feed him 1 ounce first and then put him on the breast. He does not like the nipple shield. I do try for some do the feeds but he will pull away and cry. I take it off and he will take the breast. I will let him comfort nurse or just practice sucking on the breast in between syringe feeding him. The milk is fine. He takes in from the breast when he does eat and take it from the syringe. It does not smell bad. I have never tasted it. I have tried cold, room temp, body temp, warm, and very warm. He has refused all of it. He takes the milk from the syringe at room temp or body temp or slightly warmed when it’s from the fridge. I will keep trying the breast, using the nipple shield, and the bottle. |
I’m not suggesting using it as a feeding tube - it’s used like an SNS, it’s just easier and more widely available then the actual SNS system as most medical places have NG tubes. You put one end in a bottle with formula or pumped milk, and one at your nipple, so baby gets fluid from both when he sucks. It can help stimulate him to suck deeper and longer at breast as he is getting “results”, and also can help protect your supply. |
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OP - does your baby suckle on anything? Their hand/finger, a pacifier, anything at all?
I am just wildly impressed that the baby is gaining weight with syringe feeds - you are clearly working SO HARD. If the baby is not sucking on anything I am, like other posters said, concerned about a tongue tie or some other structural mouth issue that has not been caught yet. |
+1 I really would see someone who is an expert in tongue ties and potential issues there. Not all lactation consultants are. I saw THREE that didn't find my son's lip and tongue tie (he had a posterior tie that was hard to see), after so many issues months later an ENT was like oh he has an OBVIOUS lip tie. See a lactation consultant who has specific training in tongue and lip ties. something about sucking isn't working for him so there is very likely something going on in his mouth. I already recommended Susan Howard - arlington lactation, but just mentioning again. She is an expert in tongue ties. If she's not available quickly enough she will recommend people are also well trained. She has a nice assistant who is very helpful if you email. You could also see a pediatric dentist, though I think they prefer an LC has diagnosed it before hand. We saw Dr. Lupita Roca in falls church https://www.arlingtonsmilecenter.com/ People also recommend Dr. Jaju https://www.smilewonders.com/ It sounds like you are an amazing mom doing everything you can, get some new professionals in your corner that will help you really get to the root of the issue. Saying to keep going like this is not reasonable |
Op I am the pp who recommended susan. I'm sorry but any LC who has a baby who will only syringe feed and is just telling you to "keep trying" is not doing enough for you. You need someone who will figure out the ROOT of the issue. As I said before, LCs and pediatricians miss structural issues in teh mouth ALL THE TIME. I truly can't tell you how many times I've seen it, both with my own son and with friends. Feeding with a syringe is not a long term solution. You are doing amazing making this work AND you deserve professionals in your corner who will figure this out with you and not tell you to keep trying the same things that aren't working. This is exactly what people did with my first. "keep trying it will get better" no- it did not get better! He had a structural issue that was missed. |
+1 Also, OP, not all LCs are the same. Seek out specifically an IBCLC, even if you have to go online. Some LCs only have the tool set to support “normal” breastfeeding. A nipple shield does not solve everything, and can actually be a problem/set back for some issues. I’m even more concerned that you’re saying certain bottles “fall out” of your infants mouth. This really sounds like something structural with his mouth to me, and he needs to be assessed by an oral / maxillofacial specialist. You are doing an awesome job, so please don’t stop trying and doing such a great job with syringe feeding, which is a lot of hard work on you! |
My breastfed, tongue tied kid only liked the super cheap leaky latex nipples. Might try those too. For her it was not about shape of nipple nut was about sensation of silicone. |
He will eventually take the bottle. |
Talk to the pediatrician about how to safely force the transition to bottles. |