In their own words · Slow weight gain

Slow weight gain

The number on the scale is what most families remember from this part. These four stories are about what we did between weight checks: feeding plans, pediatrician coordination, hospital admissions when that’s where it had to go, and the slow rebuilding of milk supply alongside the baby’s recovery.

4 families · written by them, unedited

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A mother nursing her baby while seated indoors.

Mande & Hannah Faith·One week·13% weight loss, hospital admission, rebuilding supply

I understood at this point that my body had failed to produce milk, and I had failed to notice.

 

I had planned to breastfeed prior to pregnancy. I had researched and read, talked and debated, finally determining that there was no better way to feed an infant. The benefits were more than I could list in a short conversation. The drawbacks were, at the worst, minor inconveniences.

I went to a breastfeeding class. I continued to read books. I went online and read message boards. I registered for a breast pump. Friends and family members gave me supplies at my showers. Some offered books and advice. They shared their stories; unfortunately, most shared how it did not work for them and how they ended up using formula long before their goal of one year. Some were undermined by family, friends, or colleagues. Others encountered problems for which they knew no remedy. Few of our mothers breastfed us, so they could not pass down knowledge that they didn’t have. Some were at peace with the early ending; others mourned it. It was discouraging, but I wanted to do everything I could to give my child the best I had to offer.

Hannah Faith arrived by unscheduled C-section after 12 hours of induced, yet unproductive, labor. I had originally planned a natural birth; my primary reason was to create the best birthing environment for the establishment of breastfeeding. But nothing went according to plan to start us off right. She was separated from me immediately at birth. I heard her crying. Groggy from drugs, I had to ask my husband if that was her. I caught glimpses of her as she was cleaned up on a warming bassinet while I was stitched up. Paul, my husband, went with her to the nursery, under strict orders that there would be no bottles.

I ached for her after birth, more than I ever could have imagined I would. She occupied a part of my body for nine months. Now, she was in a nursery with only the sound of her Daddy’s voice to reassure her. I was too far away to even hear her cry.

A nurse brought her to me in the recovery room, where I had been transferred. We had been separated for well over an hour, maybe longer. I enveloped her in my arms. She was swollen from the hours of labor and the rigors of birth, albeit surgical, but was quiet in my arms.

I offered her my breast. She latched perfectly. I was elated. Nothing had gone as expected prior to this. I had planned a natural birth. I ended up with a Pitocin-induced labor and, ultimately, a C-section. I had planned to bond with her immediately after birth. She was whisked away. I had planned on being alert and savoring every moment. I was drugged and not always aware. I had planned on being in control of everything. I couldn’t even coordinate my body parts to function properly during labor. But this. This! This was working. And this was what mattered most to me.

I had minor problems breastfeeding during my three-day stay, but we had worked through it all by the time we left. Upon discharge, I could casually hold her with one arm as she nursed. This would be easy.

We were discharged on a Friday afternoon. After three days in the hospital, I was glad to be home. By late Friday night, she was pulling off the breast after less than five minutes and drawing up her legs. I assumed it was gas. I called the pediatrician’s after-hours line (already?). I was assured that it was fine to give her Mylicon. I called the 24-hour breastfeeding help line at the hospital, and was asked to leave a message.

She was not eating at all by the early hours of Saturday. I called the pediatrician’s office again. The doctor on call recommended formula. Really? I had read that giving formula was a sure way to undermine breastfeeding, and that the baby would eat if the breast was offered. However, I did not want her to get dehydrated. I asked if I could give her Pedialyte instead. He agreed.

She still was not nursing by the early afternoon on Saturday. My mother finally gave her a bottle of formula. I had the hardest time reaching anyone for help. The on-call lactation support person from the hospital finally returned my call. She agreed to meet with me, but also recommended Suzanne Juel. I was hesitant to go since Suzanne did not work in a medical facility. Still, she was highly recommended by the hospital’s lactation educator, so I decided to call her. After I explained what was going on, Suzanne rearranged her schedule to see me on Sunday.

Suzanne put Hannah on the scale and compared her birth weight to her current weight. She had already lost 13% of her birth weight! (Newborns aren’t supposed to lose any more than 10%.) By this time, Paul and I couldn’t even think clearly. Suzanne agreed to talk to the doctor on call for us. This time, a different doctor was on call, and Suzanne explained everything in detail.

It was agreed that we would feed Hannah formula to rehydrate her and help her gain. The pediatrician agreed to call us back that evening; if Hannah had not had a wet diaper by 7:00 p.m., we would take her to Texas Children’s Hospital. Suzanne determined that my milk was not in yet, and I rented a hospital grade pump to stimulate my breasts to produce. Suzanne asked that I call her and let her know how Hannah was doing.

By that evening, Hannah had produced a diaper, but was starting to act lethargic. The pediatrician recommended we take her to Texas Children’s considering this.

Hannah was four-days-old when she was admitted to Texas Children’s Hospital. They had to try three times to catheterize her while she screamed from the pain. They performed a spinal tap and put in an IV. It tore my heart out to know she was hurting so badly. I understood at this point that my body had failed to produce milk, and I had failed to notice. As a result, my daughter was suffering.

She responded quickly to the IV fluids. I worked with a lactation consultant there as well and continued to pump. Hannah stayed in the hospital until all tests results came in and more serious problems were ruled out.

When we were discharged, I continued to give her expressed breast milk and would follow up with formula. We did this for two weeks under Suzanne’s guidance. She remained available by phone; I was always able to reach her.

At the end of two weeks, my supply had finally reached a steady point and was adequate for feeding Hannah. She latched back onto the breast. At this point, my nipples were inflamed and red. It hurt to nurse. We had thrush, a yeast (fungal) infection that can be passed between mother and baby. I went back to pumping and feeding her expressed breast milk from a bottle. Hannah and I had a resistant strain of thrush, and it took nearly three weeks to cure.

When a culture of my nipples finally came back negative for fungal and bacterial infections, Suzanne recommended I put Hannah back to the breast. My milk supply had become ample by this point. Hannah, however, had taken to the bottle and did not care for change. A few days with mastitis served both to wear me down further and reduce my milk supply.

I continued with expressing breast milk, still using the rental pump. I made peace with pumping; I set a short-term goal of six months. Pumping is very involved, and few people can keep it going for long periods of time. (Suzanne actually pumped longer than anyone I’ve known, but I’ll let her share her own story.) A goal was my way to keep Hannah on breast milk for as long as possible. After all she had to go through in the hospital, I wanted to make sure she got breast milk’s benefits, even if the delivery system was not what I had originally envisioned.

I went to a local breastfeeding support group. I was so overwhelmed. These other mothers were so encouraging but seemed to have it all together. They nursed with ease and were so knowledgeable. Some shared their experiences with thrush, supply problems, infections, and even problems I had not experienced, but I was still so overwhelmed.

I wanted desperately to get Hannah back on the breast, but it was a long shot. I felt in my heart that it could not happen. One of the lactation educators, even came by the house to help me on it one day. Hannah would only scream for the bottle.

I had almost given up hope, but I prayed for a miracle. I really wanted to nurse this baby, but I would accept pumping if that was the best I could do.

When Hannah was exactly nine weeks old, I went to talk to Suzanne about buying breast pump. When I asked her which pump would be best, she guided me into the lactation room, pulled out another nipple shield, and recommended I try just one more time to get her to latch. I thought yeah, this is going to happen as I braced myself for the inevitable screaming. Only I didn’t hear screaming. I didn’t hear anything. My daughter latched onto my breast and nursed. She nursed for at least fifteen minutes. I got my miracle. I was absolutely elated.

We reached the original six months goal for pumping, but now we’re not pumping unless it’s to get a little extra in the freezer or for cereal. Sometimes, we even ditch the nipple shield. We still attend the Mom’s group, and I try to give back, hoping I can help someone else like we were helped. I am still breastfeeding Hannah, if for no other reason than to show God that I’m grateful.

A smiling toddler boy in a striped shirt.

Carolyn P·Two sons·Tongue & lip tie, NICU support, milk supply rebuild

I was a wreck. Disappointed and hopeless, I wanted to find some answers and fast!

 

Being a first time mom is very difficult even if you have a happy, healthy baby! My first pregnancy was filled with anticipation until the delivery, then I was hopeful everything would go smoothly with breastfeeding because it looked so easy for other women. It couldn’t have been farther from the truth for me.

I began breastfeeding in the hospital and went home with a pump as well. I remember my first doctors visit a week later and learning that my son was losing weight quickly. I was so frustrated; I thought he was breastfeeding okay. I was a wreck. Disappointed and hopeless, I wanted to find some answers and fast! That’s when I went to visit Suzanne for the first time.

She evaluated my little one and noticed he had a tongue tie and lip tie. This was the reason for the poor exchange of milk, for his weight loss and for most of the pain I was feeling when he would latch. My milk supply was extremely low because my son never emptied my breasts when feeding. After my son had the tongue and lip tie revisions done, she saw him very regularly to make sure it was healing properly and that I was doing the mouth exercises correctly. He latched much better and the pain was minimal. We did everything we could to address the milk supply but I still had to supplement some. The good news was I was still able to produce a little for him every day through pumping and breastfeeding. Without Suzanne’s help, I would have had no milk supply at all.

With my second son, my baby was admitted to NICU at birth, so I was unable to try breastfeeding at delivery. But literally 15 minutes after getting moved into the recovery room, my mom had phoned Suzanne and she was able to coach me through this difficult time. With her encouragement, I began hand expressing and pumping within the hour. I expressed milk every 2 to 3 hours every day until I got my regular milk supply in. The amazing thing was that I had plenty of milk this time!!

I was so excited and grateful that I had such an experienced and caring advocate in Suzanne. Without her encouragement to “Pump Pump Pump” until I can see my baby, then to pump after breastfeeding too, I would have lost my supply. Once I returned home from the hospital, I visited Suzanne for an evaluation of my second son. He too had tongue and lip ties and some difficulty with weight gain. We got those revised quickly and Suzanne helped us with the mouth exercises once again. She helped to make sure that he was gaining well, and I continued both pumping and breastfeeding and was even able to get a little stored for future use!

My second son is completely breastmilk fed thanks to Suzanne’s persistence and kindness. She always made me feel very comfortable talking about any subject and was a huge support for me. She also helped me work through an extremely painful episode of plugged milk ducts (ouch) and mastitis. She had the amazing ability of helping me believe in myself with breastfeeding, even though it was extremely difficult!

If only I had met Suzanne earlier!! She’s a true angel and one of the best resources a new mom could ever imagine.

Worried about the scale?

A weight check alongside a feeding assessment can tell you whether the latch, supply, or something else is behind it, and what to do next.

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More stories

Two parents smiling at their newborn at home.

Regina K·One month·Emergency C-section five weeks early, coordinated care

Breastfeeding was all I had left. I needed it to work, I prayed for it to go well.

 

Nothing with my birth went the way I wanted it to go. I ended up having an emergency c-section five weeks early due to preeclampsia. No semblance at all to my planned water birth at a birthing center with midwives and doula in a softly lit room and essential oils wafting through the air. Breastfeeding was all I had left. I needed it to work, I prayed for it to go well, but I had a month-old baby who cried nonstop and never slept and my heart was breaking more each day. I was not going to give up, but if it had not been for Suzanne Juel with Bayou City Breastfeeding, I don’t think we would have made it. She understood how important it was to me to be successful for my baby. Suzanne was amazing and saw all our issues right away. I learned so much in that first meeting with her. She made changes to our technique and changes to my diet. The mouth exercises she had us do six times a day were not fun, but she knew how much our daughter needed them. She made a plan and sent us to the chiropractor, pediatric dentist and osteopath to get our daughter the additional help she needed. It was not long before we had a completely different baby. I now have the happiest eight-month-old with the cutest chubby cheeks and our breastfeeding relationship couldn’t be more perfect! Suzanne was an answered prayer and I am so incredibly thankful. She has the knowledge and skills to identify and correct issues, but more importantly she truly cares and has the heart to help mommas and babies. Thanks to Suzanne’s help, I now have a positive ending to my birth story.

A mother kneeling on a blanket beside her smiling baby on the grass.

Kaylan & Travis·One-pound weight loss·Posterior tongue tie, lip tie, feeding plan

He had lost a pound and I was about to just give up breastfeeding.

 

My husband and I were blessed with our healthy 8-pound baby boy, Travis. Soon after delivery we worked on getting him to latch to start nursing. Right from the start he didn’t eat very well and would want to sleep instead of eating. He began losing weight and we were having to go to the pediatrician every 3 days for a weight check. They were telling me to supplement with formula every other feeding to try and get his weight back up. He had lost a pound and I was about to just give up breastfeeding. I was so stressed and upset that I was failing my baby. I wanted to give him the best nutrition and benefits and longed for that baby/mommy bond from breastfeeding. My mom found Bayou City breastfeeding online and we got in touch with a Lactation consultant right away. They talked to me that day on the phone for about 45 min trying to help me and my son. I booked an appointment and that’s when things started getting better. We met with Suzanne, our consultant, and within 5 minutes of looking at Travis she knew why we were having problems. She found he had a posterior tongue tie and lip tie. She advised us to the best specialist to take him and get them released. She helped me build a pumping routine and a feeding schedule that helped my milk come in (that I followed diligently). Since that first appointment with our consultant he has been thriving and I’m able to successfully breastfeed my baby. I’m forever grateful for Suzanne and Bayou City Breastfeeding.

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