After the baby finishes drinking milk, symptoms such as galactorrhea and vomiting appear. At this time, parents become particularly nervous, which also means that the milk the baby drank before was in vain. When faced with problems such as lactation and vomiting in infants, parents want to find out the cause. So, what are the reasons why infants are prone to lactation and vomiting?
Babies are prone to galactorrhea and vomiting, which are generally related to development, such as incomplete development of the baby's gastric cardia function and lower esophageal sphincter, or when the baby lies flat or defecates forcefully after drinking milk, coughs violently, cries violently, or has large body movements, the milk in the stomach is easily refluxed into the mouth, resulting in symptoms of galactorrhea or vomiting.
The symptoms of lactation and vomiting in infants are also related to the presence of gastric torsion, pyloric hypertrophic stenosis, esophageal reflux disease, etc. Further examination is needed to determine the specific situation; It may also be due to lifestyle factors, such as incorrect feeding posture, excessive feeding speed, or placing the baby equally immediately after feeding.
Parents want to reduce the occurrence of milk overflow and vomiting in infants. After the baby drinks milk, they hold the baby at a 45 degree angle to allow the milk in the baby's stomach to flow into the small intestine as soon as possible. When feeding a baby, do not feed too much or too full. Stop feeding until 8-9 minutes full and adopt a small amount of feeding multiple times.