Friday, April 27, 2012

What Parents Have To Know About Baby Colic

By Diana Wilkinson


Looking after any baby can be tough for parents, but a baby with abdominal colic could be even more difficult. Today, we will discuss the symptoms for baby colic, a number of probable causes, as well as some tips for soothing crying baby.

The symptoms of abdominal colic are easy to identify: a colicky baby will cry for several hours a day, several days a week, over a period of three or more weeks. The crying is intense, usually at the same times each day, and the baby will sometimes pull her legs up to her belly or clench his fists, indicating the pain they are going through.

So what causes this pain? Although the word "colic" has been used for centuries, experts have yet to find one direct and clear cause for it. In fact, it's very possible that baby colic is the term we use to describe a wide variety of conditions caused by many different factors. These might include lactose intolerance, allergies, gas in the baby's digestive system, acid reflux (also known as heartburn), or hormones.

Regrettably, there isn't any one technique to make a colicky infant feel good and stop crying. Yet still frequently fathers and mothers can discover a remedy which helps by trying one particular possible option for a few days and after that, if this doesn't perform, moving on to test another thing.

If child is actually crying often and you feel she could have colic, very first eliminate any other cause (such as appetite, disease, irritants, or dirty diapers) that might be making her cry. If these ways don't work, then you can consider other methods to soothing crying baby, such as:

- A soothing, gentle massage or tummy rub

- Holding, swaddling, cuddling or perhaps lulling your child, as well as other sort of movement

- Offering a pacifier or using white noise

- For breast-fed babies, eliminating possible irritants such as spicy foods, caffeine, citrus fruit, and dairy from the mother's diet

- Over-the-counter colic drops, purchased in pharmacies

Fortunately that every newborn having colic ultimately grows out of it, typically as soon as they're 4 months old. Thus even when nothing you are trying works, remember to keep calm, and understand that sooner or later the colic will move, meaning a happier baby and a more joyful you!




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