Babies often vomit? Maybe he suffers from pyloric stenosis

Vomiting often occurs in infants, especially in the first year of birth, because the baby's stomach capacity is not too large. However, if the baby vomits frequently, this can be a sign of health problems in the body, such as pyloric stenosis.

Piloric stenosis is a problem in the baby's digestive tract that can cause babies to vomit frequently. If not treated immediately, pyloric stenosis can cause complications, such as fatal dehydration in infants who need treatment as soon as possible.

Pyloric stenosis is a rare condition that makes the channel between the stomach and intestine very small in newborns. As a result, food (including breast milk) will be very difficult to pass through the channel, so the food will be vomited again by the baby.
 
When does a baby vomit often because of suffering from pyloric stenosis?

Vomiting is indeed a major sign of pyloric stenosis. At first, you may find that the baby vomits frequently, but the intensity increases with vomiting.

During this incident, baby's mother's milk or formula comes out by mouth with the process of vomiting that appears. Vomiting can occur immediately after eating or a few hours later.

Vomiting of babies with pilen stenosis will have a special odor because it has been mixed with acid in the stomach. However, in a baby's vomiting, there will be no green liquid that indicates that milk or milk has left the stomach in the intestine.
 
Besides vomiting frequently in infants, what are the other symptoms of pyloric stenosis?

In addition to frequent vomiting, babies with pilen stenosis will also have other symptoms, such as:
  • Signs of dehydration or lack of alcohol, such as diapers that are not too wet (or who rarely urinate, usually 6 times a day), do not shed tears when crying, the baby's crown and eyes become depressed.
  • Defecate occasionally.
  • The baby's weight is stagnant or even decreases.
  • There are wrinkles in the baby's stomach that indicate that the abdominal muscles are working hard to move food (formula or formula) from the stomach to the baby's intestines.
  • There is a bump in the baby's stomach.
  • Babies are harder than usual.

It should be noted that these symptoms usually appear when the baby is between 3 and 5 weeks old. Although the baby vomits frequently, he will not feel any pain. He will continue to be hungry even after vomiting, he will cry as a sign of wanting to start sucking again.

If you see these symptoms in infants, you should immediately consult a pediatrician for immediate treatment.

How to treat babies who often vomit?

The doctor will do a physical test on ultrasound to ensure that the baby vomits frequently in contact with pyloric stenosis, and not other diseases. Physical examination involves touching the baby's stomach by detecting the presence or absence of olive-sized lumps in the baby's stomach.

If so, the baby must do ultrasound to detect the narrowing of the baby's digestive tract. Or, babies can also be asked to drink barium fluid and then undergo X-ray examinations for the same purpose as ultrasound.

When a doctor states that babies often vomit with pyloric stenosis, he must be operated on with a pyloromyotomy procedure. The doctor can also operate using a special instrument that is inserted into the abdomen through a small incision in the stomach, also called a laparoscopy.

Whatever procedure is chosen, the baby must first receive fluids that contain intravenous nutrition. Then, the baby will be totally anesthetized so that the operation, which lasts about 15 minutes to 1 hour, does not hurt him.

Your baby should be treated about 1 to 2 days after surgery to monitor his condition. If there are no complications, he will be allowed home.
After surgery, some babies can breastfeed immediately without vomiting. Not infrequently the baby vomits again in the next few days, but it is natural.

If the baby still vomits frequently after undergoing piloromyotomy or laparoscopic surgery, immediately consult a doctor who handles it. This could indicate that the baby has other digestive problems, such as gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD).

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