Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Damn, I’m sorry. That sounds awful.
It might be reflux. It might be he’s “waking up” and is just a very reactive baby who needs a lot of holding. At this age, that’s totally OK.
Is he breastfeeding? What happens if he just hangs out and comfort sucks?
Is he formula-fed? What happens if you switch to a more hypoallergenic formula?
The suddenness of the onset and the intensity of the reaction are definitely worth a call to your pediatrician in the morning, just to make sure there’s nothing serious.
Thanks. Yeah, he is exclusively breastfeeding right now. He loves the comfort suck and will gladly (at least until yesterday) hand out there and sleep for a while. It seems like feeding is the only thing that will calm him right now. We are new parents so all of this is just hard.
Have you tried a pacifier, and are you sure it’s not gas?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Damn, I’m sorry. That sounds awful.
It might be reflux. It might be he’s “waking up” and is just a very reactive baby who needs a lot of holding. At this age, that’s totally OK.
Is he breastfeeding? What happens if he just hangs out and comfort sucks?
Is he formula-fed? What happens if you switch to a more hypoallergenic formula?
The suddenness of the onset and the intensity of the reaction are definitely worth a call to your pediatrician in the morning, just to make sure there’s nothing serious.
Thanks. Yeah, he is exclusively breastfeeding right now. He loves the comfort suck and will gladly (at least until yesterday) hand out there and sleep for a while. It seems like feeding is the only thing that will calm him right now. We are new parents so all of this is just hard.
Anonymous wrote:Oh no. 2 of my 3 had this and it sucked- they didn’t spit up but lots of crying and back arching, especially 30 min after a feed. They liked to sleep on my chest, facing me, and despised being laid flat. I’m sorry to tell you this, but the truth is we got through this time with a rock n play and an inclined pack and play (plus an owlet) both of which are now banned (they are 5 and 7). We also didn’t get much sleep - often had to resort to holding them at night. We never medicated as they gained weight fine - both were born early and pretty small and caught up - but it sucked.
I could never understand how other babies peacefully went to sleep in their cribs until I had my third, who did not have silent reflux, and was a sweet angel baby that just actually went to sleep peacefully after eating. My mind was blown.
Anonymous wrote:We did all that with my kid for far longer than we should have before bringing up with the pediatrician. I blame the trauma of seeing your child suffer along with lack of sleep.
Please bring this to your ped's attention. Our kid had silent reflux. You can't use the meds he was given anymore but I'm sure there are others.
Anonymous wrote:Damn, I’m sorry. That sounds awful.
It might be reflux. It might be he’s “waking up” and is just a very reactive baby who needs a lot of holding. At this age, that’s totally OK.
Is he breastfeeding? What happens if he just hangs out and comfort sucks?
Is he formula-fed? What happens if you switch to a more hypoallergenic formula?
The suddenness of the onset and the intensity of the reaction are definitely worth a call to your pediatrician in the morning, just to make sure there’s nothing serious.