29 answers

Infant Reflux

Does anyone have any experience in infant reflux? My pediatrition is thinking that my 8-week-old son has reflux. Right now we're "testing" out some things to try and control it. We keep him sitting up most of the time, prop him up in his crib, give him smaller bottles, switched to soy.... So far none of this has worked. He's gaining weight and is happy as can be. But next thing you know he's like a fountain shooting his formula straight out his mouth and nose. I'm thinking the doctor will have us add cereal next and possibly a prescription to control it. But wanted to see if anyone else had experienced this with their little one(s).

What can I do next?

So What Happened?™

Well, over the past 4 weeks since this started we've tried everything the doctor has thrown at us. The last thing was switching his formula to Alimentum, which he did absolutely horribly with. He couldn't even keep one bottle down. So we're going to be starting him on Zantac and he also has an appointment scheduled with a GI specialist. My heart has just been breaking watching him every day go through this. No infant should have tears streaming down their face on a daily basis from vomiting so much. Thanks for all of your advise and support. I hope the prescription gives him some relief and the specialist us some answers soon!

Featured Answers

My son had the same problem. We started by adding cereal to his formula and then adding meds. Worked like a charm. The cereal did make him get really fat, but once he started walking at 10-1/2mos he dropped the weight and outgrew the reflux.

1 mom found this helpful

My son had reflux. Once we added cereal in his bottle, it really helped. You have to be very careful to hold him upright when you are feeding him to avoid choking. It is scary at first and quite messy, but the cereal will make it much better probably. Hopefully you won't have to do medicine.

1 mom found this helpful

My daughter (now 3) was diagnosed with reflux at 9 weeks. She was put on prescription Prevacid (although I know of several friends'children who have been on Zanax). The medicine made a miraculous difference in her as she was not gaining any weight. It helped me as well since I was breastfeeding at the time and eating nothing but dry pasta and toast (no dairy, limited fruits (acid), limited veggies (gas), etc. She was on it until 9 months with a few periods of after that. Otherwise, she seemed to have completely grown out of it. Good luck.

1 mom found this helpful

More Answers

My daughter went through that also. I breastfeed,so I knew it wasn't the formula. She eventually grew out of it. Our ped told us that sometimes the muscle that keeps the food down just isn't quite developed yet. I just kept feeding her and eventually she grew out of it. I hate that so many dr's are so quick to put little babies on meds and cereal. I'm not saying that your son doesn't have reflux, just a personal opinion of mine:-) I would think that as long as he's gaining weight and it's not causing him any discomfort, to just let it go. We always kept plenty of receiving blankets (we used them as burp rags)handy. It was a messy situation for awhile, but now she's just fine. She hardly ever spits up. You may want to try a slow flow nipple (if you haven't already). And make sure to burp really well, one half way through the bottle and again right after. He may just have some air bubbles in his tummy that's causing the food to come back up. Good luck to you!

2 moms found this helpful

My daughter (now 3) was diagnosed with reflux at 9 weeks. She was put on prescription Prevacid (although I know of several friends'children who have been on Zanax). The medicine made a miraculous difference in her as she was not gaining any weight. It helped me as well since I was breastfeeding at the time and eating nothing but dry pasta and toast (no dairy, limited fruits (acid), limited veggies (gas), etc. She was on it until 9 months with a few periods of after that. Otherwise, she seemed to have completely grown out of it. Good luck.

1 mom found this helpful

My sister's son had this so bad. This has been quite a long time ago but it was just something he had to go through. It lasted for about 3 mos or so but then gradually stopped. He was gaining weight so at that time the doctors didn't really do anything. She tried different formulas, goats milk and so on, nothing helped.
He was always above normal in the weight class and now is a big handsome boy.
I wish there was something else to share with you. I am sure there is something now that the doctors prescribe.
Good luck with this. Just know that they do outgrow this if you are worried about meds.
C.

1 mom found this helpful

My son just went through this six months ago. I gave him Mylanta Supreme after each bottle for a couple of days. It worked really well but is not a long term solution. We ended up putting him on Zantac for about 4 months. By the time he was 5 months old, it was mostly gone and were able to take him off the medication. Also, after trying a ton of formula's, I switch to Enfamils low iron and added a teaspoon of cereal. (He would spit up everythig else including the A.R. and got super constipated. My pediatrician thought it was odd, but said everychild is different.) It made a world of differce. Evedently he had a low iron tollerance that got worse when I switch from Breast to Bottle. I also propped his crib mattress up about 6 inches to help him sleep better. He did'nt like being in his swing either till we switched to one that swang from side to side instead of front to back. Many a'nights he slept in his swing when nothing else worked. Good luck and remember most babies outgrow it by 6 months and almost all do by one year.

1 mom found this helpful

my son Brody used to have reflux real bad as a baby. he'd be just fine & next thing you know it was like a geyser... we did switch him to soy since he was lactose intolerant but that didn't affect the reflux much. I put a couple flakes of cereal in his formula, rice if I remember right but its been 5 yrs now. that helped some but mainly I just think it was time that did the trick. it just gradually got better after he hit 8 or 9 months so by the time he was a year he was pretty much done.

1 mom found this helpful

Hi there! My middle daughter, who is now 7, had what doc's termed "projectile vomiting", due to what my pediatrician said was an immature "flap" over the esophogus. She said alot of infants are prone to the projectile vomiting until the "flap" matures and is big enough and strong enough to do it's job correctly...and that is to keep the esophogus covered after the food has been swallowed, so it'll stay in the stomach. Like your son, my daughter was otherwise happy and healthy, and thrived. Did'nt ever lose weight over it. I just had to wait until the problem corrected itself, and it did! When i hear Reflux, i think of acid reflux, and most babies are too young to experience that. I know it does occur, but it's not very common. I truly believe your son has the same minor problem my daughter did-immature esophageal flap. That explains why the switching formula, and propping him up methods you've tried did'nt work! Ask your pediatrician about the likelihood of this, before you put him on medicine! It's a harmless thing! Good luck! P.S. I breastfed, and it did'nt matter-bottle or breast, the vomiting happened because of the problem, not their nutrients! :)

1 mom found this helpful

With my daughter she spit up her formula a lot when she was little so we switched to Enfamil A.R.. It has the rice in it so it's a little thicker and she didn't spit up as much. Have you tried that one yet? We tried her on soy milk before this one and it didn't make any difference with her either. The thicker it is the better it stayed down. Plus we give her (she's 7 months old) 5 ounce bottles. She tends to spit up more if she has more than that only because her stomach can't handle that much more than 5 or 6 ounces. Hope you find something that works!

1 mom found this helpful

thicking the formula with cereal helps. it worked with my little boy. we just keep adding a teaspoon of cereal to his formula until he didn't spit up anymore. so usually the thicker the better.

1 mom found this helpful

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