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Coupon not valid for any orders placed before receipt of coupon Free LEAN Kids book with the purchase of the NDD Book
The Sears Parenting Library's latest addition is an exploration of how nutrition affects the brains and behavior of youngsters. N.D.D., or Nutrition Deficit Disorder, as coined by Dr. Bill Sears, is based on the idea that if "you put junk food into a child's brain, you get back junk behavior and learning."
THE N.D.D. BOOK will be a must-have for all parents who want to help their children become healthier, happier, and better prepared to learn.
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e-mail address is used ONLY by AskDrSears.com for the purpose of
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CONSTIPATION
How do I know if my child is constipated?
Constipation refers to the
compactness of the stools and the difficulty passing them, not the frequency of
bowel movements. The consistency and number of stools varies according to age
and from baby to baby. Newborns have several stools a day that are soft and the
consistency of seedy mustard, especially if breastfed. Formula-fed infants
usually have fewer, firmer and darker stools. Once solid food enters the diet, the stools become more
formed and less frequent, and some babies may have a bowel movement without
difficulty only once every three days, but daily is preferable.
To tell if your baby is constipated, look for the following signs:
In a newborn, firm stools less than once a day with straining and difficulty
passing them
Dry, hard stools and pain on passing them
Hard, pebble-like stools passed by a baby who strains during a bowel
movement, drawing her legs up on her abdomen, grunting, and getting red-faced
Streaks of blood along the outside of the stool
Abdominal discomfort along with hard, infrequent stools
What causes constipation?
Normally, as digested food travels down the
intestines, water and nutrients are absorbed, and the waste material becomes
stools. For a soft stool to form, enough water must remain in the waste
material, and the lower intestinal and rectal muscles must contract and relax to
move the stool along and out. Malfunction of either of these mechanisms – too
little water or poor muscle movement – can cause constipation. Being plugged up
with a hard stool for three days can be very uncomfortable. In fact, we did not
appreciate this until we strained along with one of our babies, who was
constipated for the first two years of his life. As Martha would help him
produce a bowel movement, she would proclaim, "I feel like a mid-wife."
Constipation can become a self-perpetuating problem. Hard stools
cause pain on passage; consequently, the child holds on. The longer the stool
remains, the harder it becomes – which makes it even more painful to pass. And
the longer the large stool stretches the intestines, the weaker their muscle
tone becomes. To complicate matters, passage of a hard stool through a narrow
rectum often tears the rectal wall (called a rectal fissure) , accounting for the streaks of blood. This painful tear prompts baby even more not to want to
have a bowel movement.
Consider these causes of constipation in your infant:
New foods or milks can set off constipation. Has your baby begun new foods,
switched from breast milk to formula, or formula to cow's milk? If you suspect
a food or milk change as the culprit, return to the looser-stool diet.
For bottlefed infants, consider experimenting with various formulas to find
the one that is kindest to the stools. Also, give your formula-fed baby an
extra bottle of water a day.
Constipation in Children:
The cause could also be emotional. Is your toddler going through a
negative phase or emotional upset that may cause reluctance to have a bowel
movement? When a person is upset, his or her intestinal functions may be upset,
showing either diarrhea or constipation.
Your child may not be drinking enough water and/or fluids. Consider
giving your child 2 to 3 extra glasses of water or dilute juice (¼ juice
to ¾ water) a day.
Not enough fiber (fresh fruits and vegetables and whole grains) in
your child's diet.
The following is Dr. Sears' ten-step plan for treating constipation:
Drink to go. Not drinking enough fluids is also a subtle contributor
to problems with constipation, especially in the very young and very old. The
colon is your body's fluid regulator. If you're not drinking enough, your colon
steals water from the waste material and gives it to the body, causing the
stools to be water deprived or hard. People eating high-fiber diets actually
increase their risk of constipation if they don't drink extra water along with
fiber-rich foods, since fiber needs water to do its intestinal sweeping job.
More fluids in your diet put more fluids in your bowels, lessening constipation.
Add more fiber foods to child's diet. Fiber softens the stools by drawing
water into them, making them bulkier and easier to pass. Fiber foods for older
babies are bran cereals, graham crackers, whole-grain breads and crackers, and
high-fiber vegetables such as peas, broccoli, and beans. (For a fiber-rich
diet, see fiber foods.)
Get moving. Exercise improves digestion and speeds the passage of food
through the intestines. A moving body gets the bowels moving, too.
Ease the passage of stools. Your infant may need a little outside help with
a well-timed suppository. As they are going through a phase of learning how to
have a bowel movement, many babies in their early months grunt and draw up their
legs to push out a stool. But the straining baby may appreciate a little
outside help with a well-timed, well-placed glycerin suppository. Available without prescription at your pharmacy,
these look like tiny rocket ships. If your baby is straining, insert one as far
into the rectum as you can and hold baby's buttocks together for a few minutes
to dissolve the glycerin. These are especially helpful to lubricate the rectum
if baby has a rectal tear or bleeding . Don't use for more than a few days without your doctor's advice.
Wiggle it out. As soon as you insert the glycerin suppository, wiggle it a
bit, which stimulates the tense rectal muscles to relax and eases the passage of
the hard stools.
Insert liquid glycerin. Liquid glycerin (Babylax) may be gently inserted by
dropping it into baby's rectum, which often stimulates a bowel movement.
Use natural laxatives. When using a laxative, try the most natural first.
Begin with diluted prune juice (with pulp), a tablespoon or two for the six-
month-old and as much as eight ounces for the toddler. Try strained prunes or
make a prune puree (stew your own or buy commercial), either straight or
disguised (mixed with a favorite food), or spread it on a high-fiber cracker.
Apricots and the four P's – prunes, pears, plums, and peaches – usually exert a
laxative effect. If these seem insufficient, here are other ideas to try:
Psyllium husks (basically, very fine flakes of
psyllium bran, available at nutrition stores) are a natural-fiber stool
softener. This bland laxative is served sprinkled on cereal or combined with a
fruit-and-yogurt mixture.
Dosage of psyllium:
Adults: Begin with one teaspoon and increase to one tablespoon once a day as
needed.
Toddlers and children: Begin with one teaspoon a day and increase to two
teaspoons a day as needed.
Be sure to take psyllium with an eight-ounce glass of water. For this
concentrated fiber to work the intestines need lots of fluid; otherwise,
psyllium can "gum up" in the intestines and actually increase the constipation.
You can also mix psyllium powder in a smoothie. Psyllium is also available
over-the-counter as Metamucil.
Nonprescription laxatives, such as Malt-supex (a malt-barley extract) or
Metamucil (psyllium powder), may soften your child's stools.
Flax oil is a favorite. A healthy alternative to
mineral oil is flax oil, which not only has laxative
properties, but is a valuable source of omega 3 fats as well. (Although you may
hear that mineral oil is a good oil to relieve constipation, because it is a
mixture of hydrocarbons dried from petroleum products, I have never been
convinced of its safety. And, unlike flax oil, it certainly has no nutritional
benefits.) Unlike mineral oil, which slides through the intestines, possibly
taking vitamins with it, flax oil is a nutrient that facilitates absorption of
the vitamins.
Dosage of flax oil:
Infants: one teaspoon a day
Toddlers: two teaspoons a day
Children and adults: one tablespoon a day
Flax seed meal (ground flax seeds) is an
even a better laxative than flax oil since it contains fiber. They look similar
to finely ground bran flakes and mix well with soupy cereal, or even better,
added to a high-fiber smoothie .
Dosage of flax seed meal:
Toddlers: one tablespoon a day
Older children and adults: two tablespoons a day
Stool-Ade - Make a smoothie. See Dr. Sears' School-Ade recipe which also doubles as Stool-Ade. An easy way to get lots of fiber and laxative foods into
your child is by making a stool-softening smoothie
Over-the-counter suppositories. Besides glycerin suppositories, try glycerin suppositories
that also include a laxative ingredient. These may be used periodically if the
constipation is severe and resistant to the above simpler measures.
Use an enema as a last resort. Baby Fleet may be tried if your
toddler is miserably constipated and nothing else is working. It is available
without prescription, and directions are on the package insert.
CONSTIPATION IN INFANTS UNDER A YEAR
In addition to the above general tips for preventing and treating constipation
at all ages, try these infant-specific tips:
If formula-feeding, experiment with different formulas to find which one is
most intestinal-friendly.
Feed baby smaller amounts of formula more frequently, which gives the
intestines a better chance to properly digest the formula. An easier rule of
thumb is to feed half as much twice as often.
Delay introduction of solid foods, especially more constipating ones, such
as rice and bananas. Instead of rice cereal, try barley cereal. Good starter
high-fiber foods for constipated infants are pureed pears and prunes.
Ease the passage of stools using glycerin suppositories or liquid glycerin
(as described above).
Add one teaspoon of flax oil once a day mixed into baby cereal or baby's
bottle.
Watch for about-to-go signs. As soon as your baby begins to grunt, grimace,
look bloated, or show signs of straining, quickly insert a glycerin suppository
to ease the passage.
The Bath and Bowel Movement Technique
Here is a Sears' family trick that helped us ease the passage of stools in
several of our constipated babies. Although it's messy, it works. Immerse your
baby in a warm bath so that the water is around chest-high. When your baby is
relaxed in the bath, massage baby's abdomen and get ready for the mudslide.
CONSTIPATION AND IRON-FORTIFIED FORMULA
Before rushing to attribute your baby's constipation to the iron in the
formula, you may be interested to know that controlled studies performed by the
late Dr. Frank Oski, Professor and Chairman of the Department of Pediatrics at
John Hopkins Medical School, showed that iron-fortified formulas do not cause
constipation any more than formulas without iron.
On the other hand, scientific research and mothers' first-hand observations
sometimes clash. Even in our pediatric practice, a mother occasionally tells us
she's absolutely certain that iron causes constipation. Yet, your baby does
need an iron-fortified formula. Low-iron formulas simply don't provide adequate amounts of iron, resulting in anemia , between the ages of six to twelve months.
If you're certain an iron-fortified formula contributes to constipation, use
all the treatments recommended. If baby is still constipated, try using a low-
iron formula for two months. Then, once your baby's intestines are more mature
and his toleration increases, you can switch back to a fortified formula.
TODDLER HOLDS ON TO BOWEL MOVEMENTS
Constipation is one of the most uncomfortable and perplexing problems in the
young child. This is how the system is normally designed to work: The presence
of a lot of stool in the large intestine signals an urge to defecate. The child
either responds to this signal or chooses to ignore it if he is too busy
playing. Unlike the urge to urinate, which a child usually cannot control for
long, he can choose to ignore his signal to defecate. The longer he ignores it,
the more the fluid in the retained stool is absorbed and the harder the stools
become. It then hurts to go to the bathroom, causing the child to hold onto his
stools even longer, and the vicious cycle begins – he holds onto his stools
longer and longer and becomes more and more constipated.
Try the following with your child:
Make a diagram of the large intestine, showing large "golf balls" of stools
at the end of the large intestine. Show your child that voluntarily holding
onto his stools makes them harder, and that is why it hurts to pass them.
Encourage him to have a bowel movement at set times during the day, mainly
after breakfast.
Encourage him to respond to his urge to go promptly. Convey to him that he
should "go when you have to go."
If your child has had this problem for a long time, the intestinal muscles
may be somewhat weakened and a month of stool softening may be needed to correct
this problem. Try Dr. Sears' ten-step plan for treating constipation as listed
above.
Your privacy is a PRIMARY consideration of AskDrSears.com. Your
e-mail address is used ONLY by AskDrSears.com for the purpose of
announcing news, events and special offers available only
AskDrSears.com registered users.
Coupon Code: leanndd
Coupon not valid for any orders placed before receipt of coupon Free LEAN Kids book with the purchase of the NDD Book
The Sears Parenting Library's latest addition is an exploration of how nutrition affects the brains and behavior of youngsters. N.D.D., or Nutrition Deficit Disorder, as coined by Dr. Bill Sears, is based on the idea that if "you put junk food into a child's brain, you get back junk behavior and learning."
THE N.D.D. BOOK will be a must-have for all parents who want to help their children become healthier, happier, and better prepared to learn.
Your privacy is a PRIMARY consideration of AskDrSears.com. Your
e-mail address is used ONLY by AskDrSears.com for the purpose of
announcing news, events and special offers available only
AskDrSears.com registered users.
AskDrSears.com is intended to help parents become better informed consumers
of health care. The information presented in this site gives general advice
on parenting and health care. Always consult your doctor for your individual
needs.