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Did Baby Emily have Acid Reflux?

Jan Gambino
Jan Gambino
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Jan Gambino is Hoping to hear your questions and concerns about reflux.
Reflux Mom and Author

Jan Gambino,"The Reflux Mom" (www.refluxmom.com) is an author and...

Jan Gambino

Monday, April 14, 2008
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This is a story about my first born daughter Emily. Sometimes I wonder if baby Emily had Gastroesophageal Reflux (GER), a normal physiological condition of infancy with digestive symptoms such as spit up and occasional vomiting. In the first few months of life, she had a fussy period every afternoon and evening. Emily fretted and fussed at the breast. Eating, holding bathing, swaying, swaddling, burping did little to improve her comfort. Sometimes it seemed like she was in pain.

 

Sometimes I wonder if baby Emily had colic. Colic is defined as crying for 3 hours a day, 3 days a week for 3 months. Well, Emily did cry on and off for 3-4 hours every afternoon but she was otherwise healthy and easy going for the rest of the day. She nursed well and eventually started sleeping through the night at an early age.

 

Sometimes I wonder if baby Emily was well, acting like a baby. Lets face it, all babies cry. There is nothing to prepare a new parent for the experience of sitting in your home alone with a crying baby. The baby is thrashing in your arms, your back aches and you can't think straight. You imagine the worse: something must be terribly wrong.

 

I had worked with babies with complicated medical and developmental issues before becoming Emily's mommy. I thought that holding underweight babies with fragile neurological systems would prepare me for any amount of crying and advanced care giving. Perhaps it did. I think that I had a higher tolerance for crying and knew on some level that she would eventually stop crying. I knew quite a bit about swaddling and swaying and the need to keep her attached to me as much as possible in a baby carrier. But it was still hard work and sent me to the baby books and pediatrician for reassurance. I don't recall having a specific conversation about her crying spells but I am sure that I did. The crying spells still left me feeling insecure and inadequate as a mother.

 

There is some evidence that more and more babies are being prescribed reflux medications for a variety of symptoms such as crying during and after feeding and perhaps even "acting like a baby". If a parent brings a baby to the doctor and reports crying and other digestive symptoms, medical treatment may be given in the form of medication. Doctors and researchers fear that the increased knowledge of Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease (GERD) and the awareness of medications targeted for infants as young as one year of age are key factors. A recently published research study lends support to this concern. When a group of babies on reflux medications were tested for signs of Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease, only a small number of the babies actually had evidence of GERD.

 

And here is the truth, if baby Emily was my youngest and not my firstborn; it is likely she would have been one of those babies on reflux medication too. My youngest had severe GERD and I became hyper alert to the signs and symptoms. It took awhile to figure out the symptom pattern and begin treatment. After parenting a baby with severe GERD, I am sure that I would have marched into the doctor's office with Baby Emily and demanded treatment for her GERD before it got worse. While there are plenty of babies with GERD out there, I imagine there are plenty of baby Emily's too.

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