S.W. asks from Olathe, KS on June 24, 2008
Infant Eating After the Flu
My daughter had a severe case of the flu that lasted for about 1 1/2 weeks. Her doctor told me to give her Pedialyte, however, she refused to drink it or anything else. I finally succeeded in having her drink her soy formula diluted by 90%. We are about up to where she is drinking it at a 100% mixture rate. It has taken me an entire week of increasing the formula ratio because if I increased it too much she would vomit it right back up.
My question is how soon after having the flu do infants go back to solids. She will eat puffs, cherios and goldfish, but she refuses to eat cereal or other solids. I really don't blame her since she got sick a few times after eating solids. I am really proud that she is at least eating some other things and can almost have 100% formula.
My main concern for the solids is that she is 11 months old and I can just hear her doctor freak out on me at her 12 month check-up if she is not eating something other than formula and snack light foods. Do I have reason for concern or should I just let her guide me for when she is ready to eat solids again? Also, has anyone else had this happen to them?
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H.N. answers from St. Louis on June 25, 2008
My son just went through the same thing. He wouldn't be forced to eat, but did it in his own time. I just kept offering him foods at his normal times and eventually he ate them. He drank only milk for about a week and finally started eating a little bit more each day. Hang in there!
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C.M. answers from Kansas City on June 25, 2008
One word of advice. We had a doctor at one point in time tell us to give them Kool-aid diluted in half instead of Pedialyte. They said that it has all the stuff that they need but it is so much less expensive. A lot of times kids will drink it better too. I would let her guide you on when she is ready for the solids. Maybe try giving her something new that she hasn't had before since she might be associating the foods she is used to with the bad reactions.
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M.L. answers from St. Louis on June 25, 2008
try putting warm chicken broth in a sippy cup. try popcycles for liquid. even make a slushy from them. the funner you make it the more receptive she will be. put a crazy straw in the cup with colored crushed ice. Try soft foods for a while. Jello, pudding, mashed potatoes, PBJ take a cookie cutter and cut shapes out and see if that helps entice her. apple juice with crushed ice. Good luck pray she gets well soon.
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K.B. answers from Wichita on June 25, 2008
Good Morning S., I would let your little one tell you when she is ready for solids again. Her tummy may be sensitive still.
If her Dr. freaks remind them she had the Flu. ;)
We are waiting to see the Dr tomorrow, our 3 yr old gr son has run and high fever since Sat evening. His mom called dr. hotline to leave a message to call back his temp was 102 and rising. Tylenol and fluids. Sunday temp fluctuated 99.9 -102
Monday early he started Spittin" ( vomiting ) Dr. said wait another day since he is vomiting the infection should be on it's way out.
Tuesday his temp was 104 We called the Hosptial ER Nurse. Grrr they can't give out medical info anymore BUT if his temp got to 106 bring him in. She told our daughter in law adults can not take the high temps but kids can. Doesn't sound so good to me.
his Dr is out of town today but we found his ears infected and draining last night also.
I hate it when little ones get sick!!!
Hope you precious angel returns to eating like she used to soon.
K.
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H.H. answers from Kansas City on June 25, 2008
I can't believe your doctor would freak out if you weren't feeding solids as it really isn't a requirement for babies to eat solids at all the first 12 months. Feeding them solids is just a learning experience for them to learn to eat with a spoon, drink out of a cup and learn new textures of food. Babies get all the nutrition they need from formula and breastmilk so extra foods is more for learning rather than nutrition. I am surprised your doctor didn't recommend nutramegen formula which is a lot more expensive but works well when kids are sick as they can usually tolerate it better than the other formulas that are more milk based. I also couldn't get them to drink pedialyte so gave them gatorade sometimes especially if they weren't drinking anything at all, it was better than having them dehydrate from not having anything. They usually weren't sick more than 2 days either so 1 1/2 weeks would be hard to try to force the pedialyte that taste so bad.
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R.D. answers from Kansas City on June 24, 2008
PLEASE don't beat yourself up - you are doing fine and just what you should do. My son's pediatrician told me an infant's main source of nutrition should be breastmilk or formula for the entire first year. The reason we introduce solids is so we don't have two and three year olds still exclusively nursing or drinking formula. They need to learn to move food around in their mouth and swallow (with runny/soft foods, #1 & #2 jars, purees, etc) and to chew (with soft pieces of banana, #3 jar foods, fully cooked diced carrots, etc). As long as she is getting well and 'thriving,' STOP WORRYING! You are doing exactly what your little angel needs you to do right now. Think about the last time you were sick for that long - I know I wasn't ready for anything but chicken noodle soup and toast for quite a while. So please try to relax and let her guide you through her recovery. OH! And if she is eating puffs, Cheerios and the like, it might feel good (scratchy) on her throat.
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H.N. answers from St. Louis on June 25, 2008
My son just went through the same thing. He wouldn't be forced to eat, but did it in his own time. I just kept offering him foods at his normal times and eventually he ate them. He drank only milk for about a week and finally started eating a little bit more each day. Hang in there!
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C.M. answers from Kansas City on June 25, 2008
One word of advice. We had a doctor at one point in time tell us to give them Kool-aid diluted in half instead of Pedialyte. They said that it has all the stuff that they need but it is so much less expensive. A lot of times kids will drink it better too. I would let her guide you on when she is ready for the solids. Maybe try giving her something new that she hasn't had before since she might be associating the foods she is used to with the bad reactions.
1 mom found this helpful
W.H. answers from Springfield on June 25, 2008
Don't worry, she will let you know when she's ready to eat solids again and everytime I've been to the Dr with my daughter when she's had the flu, they said they didn't care if she ate solids or not, they were only concerned if she was getting enough fluids. I was way more concerned about her eating solids than the Dr/nurse was. Let her guide you and she'll be fine. Good luck!
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T.R. answers from St. Louis on June 25, 2008
I remember my doctor telling me that milk products have an enzyme that will keep the virus in your system for a long time, he always had me to take my children off all milk products for at least three days to let their systems clear of the virus completely. I have raised four children and it has always worked for us.
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