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Maternal & Child Community

This patient support community is for discussions relating to breast feeding, childhood disease, colic, child discipline, immunization, lactation, newborn care, post partum depression, Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS), and special needs children.
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Colic and White Noise

by someonemr, Mar 25, 2007 12:00AM
Hi, All I am wondering what other forms of white noise you have had success in treating colic. I have tried the vacuum cleaner white noise method with some success (at least from a cost perspective it was good). I managed to find a good mp3 file at www.lanterntree.com/baby/babywhitenoise.html . Has anyone tired any other forms of white noise with any success?  
Member Comments (10)

by ma2isiah, Mar 25, 2007 12:00AM
Static noise between radio stations worked great for my son!

by ally76, Mar 25, 2007 12:00AM
Same with my dd's......static noise from the radio worked great!

by caseys mommy, Mar 25, 2007 12:00AM
My son didn't have colic, but what did soothe him was a sleep machine that had "rain" as an option. He's 2 1/2 and still sleeps with it!

When I was out of the house and needed to soothe him, I would put him in a baby bjorn and turn the exaust fan on over the stove and bounch up and down while he sucked a binky. Everyone has an exaust fan, so I could calm him down no matter where I was. People thought I was crazy, but when a baby goes from screaming, to completely calm, they couldn't argue with me!

Good luck to you and your baby! I'm a big believer in the "5 S's theory". Worked like a charm for us. Look it up if you're interested.

by Trialanderror, Mar 25, 2007 12:00AM
No colic but I used a fan until I checked the hydro bills.

by nikki2274, Mar 26, 2007 12:00AM
I hope that the radio noise works...we tried everything (radio noise, nature sounds, vaccuum cleaner and even putting her in her carseat on top of the dryer/washing machine)...but the only thing that worked for our DD was cradling her, lightly shaking her up and down motion, walking around the house and humming (all at the same time).  We endured over two months with this.  It was very tiring and thank goodness for my DH...I couldn't have gotten through it without him.  
Just know that it will all be over soon.  Our daughter finally stopped around three months.
One thing that you might try which also helped is somethign called gripe water.  It is all natural...With all that crying your baby will swallow alot of air which causes gas.  My ped gave me a sample and it was great.  She still takes it for gas every once in a while...I used it instead of Mylicon.  Talk to your dr first about it.  It is very hard ot find...mostly at health food stores
Here is a website on it.
http://www.colicease.com/

http://www.colicshop.com/babys-bliss-gripe-water.shtml

I originally used the Baby Bliss brand (the second website address)...It tasted better than the one that I use now, which my mother-in-law brought over from the UK.

Good Luck!

by lovefamily, Mar 26, 2007 12:00AM
Oct. 11, 2005 (Washington) — The age-old problem of colic in infants may be more a result of a crying reflex than gastrointestinal upset, a California pediatrician told attendees here at the American Academy of Pediatrics National Conference and Exhibition.

An infant's crying, which can last from minutes to hours, may actually be the result of missing the constant noise and stimulation of the womb, said Harvey Karp, MD, an associate professor of pediatrics at the University of California at Los Angeles Medical School. "This may be the solution to a 3,000-year-old medical mystery of what causes colic."

A new system that involves the five S's — swaddling, side/stomach positioning in the parents' arms, shushing, swinging, and sucking — can calm most crying infants, Dr. Karp said. This activates the baby's calming reflex during the first three to four months of life by mimicking experiences in the uterus.

Most infant crying is not due to an emergency, but the baby's need for attention, he said.

In his theory, infants are evicted from the womb before their "fourth trimester," before they are fully developed, Dr. Karp said. "In many ways, newborns aren't ready for the world at birth and need that fourth trimester for gentle stroking, holding, and shushing."

Past studies have shown that the average infant at six weeks of age cries about 3.5 hours a day, he said. "This results in nursing problems, marital stress, postpartum depression, unnecessary emergency room visits, and shaken baby syndrome.

It has been thought for years that the main cause of colic in infants was due to gastrointestinal problems, but this may not be true, Dr. Karp said. Colic appears to stop after three months and in preterm infants it usually does not begin until two weeks after the due date.

Only about 10% to 15% of cases of colic are caused by milk allergies, Dr. Karp pointed out. While infant acid reflux has been a prime reason cited for colic, a Denver study shows that just one in 50 crying infants in an emergency department had reflux and an Australian study showed only one in 24 crying infants younger than three months had reflux, Dr. Karp cited.

Tightly swaddling a crying infant with its arms down by its side initially may make the crying worse, Dr. Karp warned, but holding the baby on its side and gently jiggling it while supporting the head and neck has an immediate calming influence. Shushing sounds should be added, if necessary, and should be as loud as the infant's crying.

In the womb, fetuses hear a loud whooshing sound — louder than a vacuum cleaner. But after birth, there is silence. "Overstimulation is not nearly as big of a problem as understimulation," Dr. Karp said. "Babies miss the rhythmic, hypnotic sounds and movement."

Infants often fall asleep when nursing or taking a bottle, but parents should wake the infant up a tiny bit when laying the baby down to sleep, Dr. Karp said.

If the five S's are followed, not only will the crying infant stop, but the baby will sleep an extra one to two hours a night, he said.

"If the five S's are done exactly right with just enough vigor, the calming reflex will be turned on and the baby will stop crying," Dr. Karp said. "If a parent can get the baby to stop crying they feel like a million bucks, but if they can't, they feel miserable. Parents need to be taught how to quiet their babies."

Teaching this to parents may be useful, said Karen Miller, MD, an associate professor of pediatrics at Tufts University in Boston, Massachusetts. "But more research needs to be done to show the techniques are safe and effective."

Many of the individual techniques have been found to be valid, Dr. Miller said. "It's the whole package that needs further research before it is endorsed."

AAP 2005 National Conference and Exhibition: Selected Short Subjects F 131. Presented Oct. 8, 2005."

by lovefamily, Mar 26, 2007 12:00AM
http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/514376

That is where I got the article above.  I found it on google but when I tried to just copy and paste it, it wouldn't open.  I could only open it from google.  So I copy and pasted the whole article for you.   I hope it gives you some good tips and helps with you and others who are dealing with colic.  I also hope peace for you and your baby.

Blessings!

by anxiousmomtobe?, Mar 26, 2007 12:00AM
Music always soothed my babies when fussy.

by jenshim, Mar 26, 2007 12:00AM
Yes! I actually hung a blow dryer from a hook on the ceiling and turned it on. It soothed my baby immediately! We used it for months!! It definitely does work. I hope this baby I'm carrying now doesn't have colic, but if he does I will definitely be using that trick again.

by DaniWood, Mar 28, 2007 12:00AM
To: someonemr
I had people look at me like I was crazy when my 9 yr old son was a baby... we tried everything!!!  in the car he we would ahve to turn the radio station to the AM so he would stop crying.. yes its annoying but BETTER than him crying!. At home we would use the baby monitor shutting off the room one so we could have static.. It worked WONDERS!!!  Glad to see I was not crazy lol
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