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When a baby is born, and moves from his low-oxygen
home inside his mother to our higher-oxygen air, he no longer needs
all the red blood cells he had before birth. His new little
liver takes over the job of breaking down the extra cells. It dumps
the "bilirubin" from these cells into the baby's blood, which carries
it to his intestines to become part of his early poopy diapers.
But what if the baby doesn't
get much food at first - perhaps because he is separated
from his mother, or isn't nursing effectively or often? Then
he has fewer poopy diapers, and the bilirubin, instead of waiting
around, travels back into his blood, making his jaundice greater
than normal. That's where the yellow color of jaundice
comes from. It's bilirubin that ought to be leaving the baby
but isn't. It is a response not to the mother's milk but to
the lack of milk. "Separation jaundice" is a good
term for this too-little-food jaundice. Time together,
help with positioning, and offering pumped milk if needed can
all make a difference. A typical breastfed baby increases
his food gradually, producing at least 1 black poopy diaper
the first day, 2 dark ones the second day, 2 or 3 greenish
ones the third day, 3 or 4 yellow ones the fourth day, and
3 or more yellow ones from then on. If a baby looks suntanned
or orange and has fewer stools than this, he probably needs
more milk. He needs lots of time with his mother, help
with positioning so that he nurses efficiently, and perhaps
additional expressed breastmilk. Not surprisingly, jaundiced
babies often have engorged and sore mothers: milk isn't transferring
well from mother to baby.
Will water help? No. Water
makes wet diapers; this baby needs poopy diapers. He
needs food. Most of the jaundice we see is from babies
not nursing often enough or well enough. Give them more
breastmilk, and the jaundice clears. | Will
formula help? Yes, because formula makes poopy
diapers. But giving formula to a new baby is hard on his
body, can encourage allergies, increases illness risk, and makes
it harder to get breastfeeding underway. Babies need to
eat, and that comes first. But the best choice is breastfeeding. Next
is the mother's own milk, expressed for the baby. Next
is donor human milk. Commercial formula is fourth best. Just
remember, though: babies need to eat, especially if they're very
jaundiced.
What about breastmilk jaundice? About
one baby in 200 may react to his mother's milk with jaundice
that can last for weeks or even months. It begins only after the
first few days, but it can overlap with (and be exaggerated by)
separation jaundice. There's no evidence that it's harmful, but
other forms of jaundice may be; there are lab tests that can
rule out more serious forms. Some doctors want to interrupt
breastfeeding, or alternate breastfeeding with a different milk,
for a day or so, to be sure of their diagnosis. Instead
of using formula, expressed breastmilk can be heated to 56 degrees
Celsius for 15 minutes, then cooled, to destroy the jaundice-causing
part. If breastfeeding is interrupted, ask to have the
bilirubin level checked twice a day, so you can start nursing
again as soon as possible.
Ordinary newborn jaundice is almost never a
reason to interrupt breastfeeding. Parents deserve to have
their questions answered thoroughly before
they are asked to take such a serious step.
©2001 Diane Wiessinger, MS, IBCLC
136 Ellis
Hollow Creek Road Ithaca, NY 14850
Used with permission
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