Acid Reflux In Infants
Acid Reflux is actually as common in
Infants as Adults
It is not totally unheard of for people to suffer from acid
reflux disease, it is fairly quite common in fact, but reflux
is actually common as a baby as well. All though it may
at first seem like a foreign concept, it really is a very
natural thing as infants experience regurgitation in the first
three months after their birth, and this is most common amongst
more than half of all normal infants. This reflux can
occur in the various actions that a baby will experience such
as during coughing, crying, burping, or straining.
Gastro-esophageal reflux is caused when stomach contents
come back up into the esophagus, during or after a meal, and
this means that food is coming back up through the tube that
connects the mouth to the stomach. A ring of muscle or
sphincter around the bottom end of the esophagus opens and
closes to allow the predigested food to pass through to the
stomach, and this sphincter opens to release gas after meals in
normal infants, children, and adults. When the sphincter
opens in infants, the stomach contents often go up through the
esophagus and out of the mouth, and often commonly noticed in
infants as spitting up.
Most infants with gastro-esophageal reflux grow to be
perfectly happy and healthy babies, even though they may spit
up or vomit, and it is only with unique cases of acute bouts of
reflux that one should consult a doctor or your child’s
pediatrician. With gastro-esophageal reflux, the infant
may experience a variety of symptoms such as vomiting and
spitting up, but also symptoms like irritability and poor
feeding. Blood in the stool is also not uncommon.
Only a small number of infants have severe symptoms due to the
esophageal reflux, and most infants will stop spitting up
around twelve to eight months of age.
In a small percentage of those babies with gastro-esophageal
reflux, symptoms may result that are of concern, such as poor
growth due to an inability to hold down food or refusing to
feed due to pain or perhaps even breathing or blood loss from
acid burning the esophagus. Though, again, these are in
the extremely rare cases where severe symptoms have
occurred. By all accounts otherwise, gastro-esophageal
reflux in natural in newborns and infants up to a year old, and
this should rest those worries and concerns with a more
informed viewpoint on the subject.
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