My son is 12 months old. Since he was 6 months old he has fallen below the charts in weight. He also started solids at around 6m and has always gotten gassy after eating them. At 9m we discovered he was anemic. We treated him with iron drops, but it took three months for his hematacrit to be
normalNormal saline flush. And to get him there I had to switch from
breastfeedingBreast-feeding tips
Breastfeeding
Breastfeeding - resources to formula and add cereal to the formula as well as give him the iron drops. About three weeks ago he started to throw up a few times a day for a week. After the vomitting ended, everything he eats makes his belly bloat up like a balloon and he cries for a long time. He has white chunks in his stool but his stool his not runny, it is also very foul smelling. He only weighs 17lbs which is way below the chart. My pediatrician doesn't seem worried about him and keeps telling me to give it a couple more weeks, but I am not convinced. He used to be in a
normalNormal saline flush weight range before starting the solids. Should I be concerned about him or should I just do what the doctor says and give it a couple of weeks?
I finally switched doctors, but he had never regained his vitality. He had chronic diarrhea and vomiting over the next year and episodes of sleep apnea from his swollen tonsils and adenoids (adenoids). At 20 months, on the day he was supposed to have them removed, he came down with a fever of 104.7. The nurse in his pediatrician's office tried to make me wait two days for an appointment. I stormed in and demanded to see the doctor, who took one look at him and called the hospital. He had a WBC of 26,000. It took 16 hours for them to figure out it was pneumonia. We nearly lost him.
I have since learned to shout and scream if I have to when it comes to my baby. The first doctor wouldn't listen when I told him I suspected food allergies at 8 months, but couldn't pinpoint the offending agent, so I wanted testing. The second doc was better, but wanted to "wait and see". He "didn't want to put him through a potentially needless and painful test." After the pneumonia, he complied with my request for allergy testing. The test was very well tolerated, much better than the daily vomiting. We found out he was allergic to cow's milk, wheat, soy, eggs, citrus, corn, and several other things that he had been consuming daily. In fact, his breakfast in the hospital had been scrambled eggs, toast, and orange juice.
We radically changed his diet. I am happy to report that within 2 months, he had gained 3 pounds. He is now a healthy, strapping young lad with boundless energy, and his food allergies are no longer. His body had a chance to recover. He can eat anything. He had to have those adenoids (adenoids) and tonsils removed, but even that was nothing compared with the agony of his daily bouts diarrhea and vomiting, and not knowing how to get him the help he needed. You know when something is not right. Trust your instincts and push as hard as you have to to get the answers you need. If you still are told, "We can't find anything", then you docs need to learn to ask the right questions. Good luck. I hope and pray you don't go through the misery we endured from listening to negligent,lazy doctors who make you feel like you're the one with the problem.