26 answers

Gas Pains Keeping Babies up at night...HELP

We have 4.5 month old twins that are not STTN yet. A lot of it is because they have terrible gas pains at night. They are primarily breastfed, but I do supplement a bottle of formula or two. However, prior to them receiving any formula they were still having these gas issues, so we don't think formula is a contributing factor. Do you have any tips/suggestions/ideas to help alleviate the gas pains?? We use mylicon drops but it doesn't seem to do all that much. Thanks!

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Featured Answers

Massage is good. Gripe water worked really well for us as did the chiropractor. Funny to use the chiropractor to relieve gas but it really worked!
Good luck!

1 mom found this helpful

S., If the mylicon is not working maybe try a different brand. Mylicon worked great for my daughter but baby gas-x did nothing to help her.

Gas is created from the foods we eat. You can eliminte 1 food group a week and see which food it is. That could take a couple months or you can find an intuitive homeopath and find out in 30 seconds which food it is.

More Answers

Massage is good. Gripe water worked really well for us as did the chiropractor. Funny to use the chiropractor to relieve gas but it really worked!
Good luck!

1 mom found this helpful

Babies are probably reacting to something in your diet. Milk and milk products are a common source of discomfort for baby. Try eliminating different foods from your diet and keep a log. Both my boys doctors eliminated Milk products first (very difficult for Mom!) Good Luck!

My oldest son had a hard time with the milk based formula. We switched to the Target brand soy formula and he was a whole new baby! Also, Mylicon didn't work for him either. We used the Gerber brand gas drops, which are all natural, and they worked wonders. You can find them at Cub, or try the website. They have a product finder that allows you to put in your zip code and it will tell you where in your area you can buy the drops. Good luck!

I see you have a lot of good advise, I would agree with the dairy sensitivity, it can make a huge difference. I noticed that there was a recommendation to switch to a non-dairy formula I do agree that can help but just an FYI on the formula mentioned I believe was nutramigen, it is dairy based and says so on the label and the ingredients, the difference is the protein is broken down more to be more readily digestible, the only truly dairy-free formulas are soy-based or amino-acid based like neo-cate, I am mentioning this b/c I was under the impression that nutramigen and alimentium were dairy-free as I have a daughter who was severely allergic to any dairy as an infant and couldn't figure out why she was still reacting to the formula and called the manufacturer and that is when I found out.

Also remember going dairy free means all dairy in foods as well, you would be amazed at what they put dairy in.

Best of luck.
S.

Gas is created from the foods we eat. You can eliminte 1 food group a week and see which food it is. That could take a couple months or you can find an intuitive homeopath and find out in 30 seconds which food it is.

For my daughter we did mylacon drops before and after each feeding and that worked wonders. Also I tried to stay away for spicy and acidic foods, cantaloupe was the worst. But please keep in mind that my daughter did not completely sleep through the night until about 10-12 months old. She just wanted to eat at the midnight feeding.

S., I'd be willing to bet it's cow's milk. Either in the formula, through your diet or both. Try avoiding dairy products and the formula both for a week. Then add dairy back into your diet. If they are problem free, it's probably the cow's milk in the formula. If it is that, they may grow out of it... but avoid it until they turn one before trying it back. My daughter is 4 1/2 and lactose intolerant. Her doctor had a funny comment. He said, "You know what they say about cow's milk.... it's for baby cows...." :-)

You may want to try and change the formula to a non-dairy based formula like Nutramigen (Enfamil with orange label). My daughter had the same issue and it was due to a milk protein intolerance. I had to cut all dairy out of my diet, be aware it takes 7-10 days to be completely out of their system (and yours too!) Once we corrected this, my daughter began sleeping through the night on the 8th day. Good Luck!

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