This document discusses the neurobehavioral basis of breastfeeding. It describes how breastfeeding is an innate behavior in newborns driven by evolutionary conserved neuroendocrine programs for defense, nutrition, and reproduction. The limbic system expresses these programs through hormones, nerves, and muscles. Breastfeeding follows a set sequence of behaviors from smelling the nipple to effective suckling and swallowing. While premature infants require extra support, their brains are wired to breastfeed from a very early gestational age. Skin-to-skin contact and breastfeeding support healthy development of the newborn brain through sensory stimulation and cycling between sleep states.
The document discusses physiology of lactation and breastfeeding recommendations. It recommends exclusive breastfeeding for six months, and continued breastfeeding for at least one year. The benefits of breastfeeding for both mother and baby are described. Proper positioning and attachment for breastfeeding are explained. Common issues like sore nipples, engorgement and mastitis are addressed. Research suggests skin-to-skin contact immediately after birth stimulates breastfeeding behavior in newborns.
Breastfeeding provides numerous health benefits to both mother and baby. It provides a balanced source of nutrition tailored to the infant's needs through various components in breastmilk including proteins, fats, carbohydrates, vitamins, minerals and antibodies. The composition of breastmilk changes over time from colostrum in the first few days to mature milk which is produced from 10 days after delivery. Breastfeeding is advantageous as it provides protection against infections, anemia, allergies and other conditions in infants. Proper positioning and attachment during breastfeeding is important to maximize its benefits.
The document discusses postnatal care and management. It defines puerperium as the period following childbirth when the body's tissues, especially the pelvic organs, return to their non-pregnant state over approximately 6 weeks. It outlines the principal goals of postnatal management as restoring the mother's health, preventing infection, promoting breastfeeding, and providing contraceptive information. It also describes various postnatal exercises that can help recovery.
Breast feeding ppt by Dr. Allah Yar Malikhuraismalik
This document discusses the benefits of breastfeeding for both mothers and infants. It provides information on the composition and types of breastmilk, as well as the advantages it provides through essential nutrients, antibodies, hormones and other factors. The document highlights how breastmilk uniquely meets the needs of infants and supports their development, unlike formula milk. It also outlines recommendations around exclusive breastfeeding for six months and continuing for up to two years. Some risks of breastfeeding and barriers to it are mentioned.
This document provides information on nutrition and protein-energy malnutrition. It defines nutrition and discusses caloric requirements for children of different ages. It also covers topics like breastfeeding, vitamins, protein requirements, and types of malnutrition like marasmus and kwashiorkor. Causes of protein-energy malnutrition include social, economic, biological and environmental factors. The clinical presentation depends on the type, severity and duration of dietary deficiencies.
This presentation is from a webinar series on management of the ewe and doe from late gestation through weaning. This presentation is on Neonatal care (care of the lamb and kid from day 0 to day 14).
Kangaroo Mother Care (KMC) involves keeping premature or low birth weight babies in prolonged skin-to-skin contact with their mothers, similar to how baby kangaroos are carried in their mother's pouch. The main components of KMC are continuous skin-to-skin contact and exclusive breastfeeding. KMC provides benefits like increased breastfeeding rates, better thermal control for the baby, and lower rates of illness compared to conventional care outside of skin-to-skin contact.
The document summarizes key aspects of childbirth and newborn development. It discusses the normal process of labor in three stages, from initiation by hormones to delivery of the baby and placenta. It also covers newborn capabilities like reflexes, senses, and early social and learning skills. Complications that can occur during birth like preterm delivery are also addressed.
The document discusses physiology of lactation and breastfeeding recommendations. It recommends exclusive breastfeeding for six months, and continued breastfeeding for at least one year. The benefits of breastfeeding for both mother and baby are described. Proper positioning and attachment for breastfeeding are explained. Common issues like sore nipples, engorgement and mastitis are addressed. Research suggests skin-to-skin contact immediately after birth stimulates breastfeeding behavior in newborns.
Breastfeeding provides numerous health benefits to both mother and baby. It provides a balanced source of nutrition tailored to the infant's needs through various components in breastmilk including proteins, fats, carbohydrates, vitamins, minerals and antibodies. The composition of breastmilk changes over time from colostrum in the first few days to mature milk which is produced from 10 days after delivery. Breastfeeding is advantageous as it provides protection against infections, anemia, allergies and other conditions in infants. Proper positioning and attachment during breastfeeding is important to maximize its benefits.
The document discusses postnatal care and management. It defines puerperium as the period following childbirth when the body's tissues, especially the pelvic organs, return to their non-pregnant state over approximately 6 weeks. It outlines the principal goals of postnatal management as restoring the mother's health, preventing infection, promoting breastfeeding, and providing contraceptive information. It also describes various postnatal exercises that can help recovery.
Breast feeding ppt by Dr. Allah Yar Malikhuraismalik
This document discusses the benefits of breastfeeding for both mothers and infants. It provides information on the composition and types of breastmilk, as well as the advantages it provides through essential nutrients, antibodies, hormones and other factors. The document highlights how breastmilk uniquely meets the needs of infants and supports their development, unlike formula milk. It also outlines recommendations around exclusive breastfeeding for six months and continuing for up to two years. Some risks of breastfeeding and barriers to it are mentioned.
This document provides information on nutrition and protein-energy malnutrition. It defines nutrition and discusses caloric requirements for children of different ages. It also covers topics like breastfeeding, vitamins, protein requirements, and types of malnutrition like marasmus and kwashiorkor. Causes of protein-energy malnutrition include social, economic, biological and environmental factors. The clinical presentation depends on the type, severity and duration of dietary deficiencies.
This presentation is from a webinar series on management of the ewe and doe from late gestation through weaning. This presentation is on Neonatal care (care of the lamb and kid from day 0 to day 14).
Kangaroo Mother Care (KMC) involves keeping premature or low birth weight babies in prolonged skin-to-skin contact with their mothers, similar to how baby kangaroos are carried in their mother's pouch. The main components of KMC are continuous skin-to-skin contact and exclusive breastfeeding. KMC provides benefits like increased breastfeeding rates, better thermal control for the baby, and lower rates of illness compared to conventional care outside of skin-to-skin contact.
The document summarizes key aspects of childbirth and newborn development. It discusses the normal process of labor in three stages, from initiation by hormones to delivery of the baby and placenta. It also covers newborn capabilities like reflexes, senses, and early social and learning skills. Complications that can occur during birth like preterm delivery are also addressed.
The document summarizes key aspects of childbirth and newborn development, including:
1. Labor typically occurs in three stages, triggered by hormones like oxytocin and culminating with the baby passing through the birth canal.
2. Newborns have physical traits like lanugo and vernix that help with birth but disappear shortly after. Their health is often assessed using the Apgar scale.
3. Preterm or low birthweight babies face serious health risks but many develop normally with time. Factors like a mother's health can influence prematurity.
This document provides information on the stages of labor and management of the first stage of labor. It discusses the normal progression through the latent, active, and transition phases of the first stage. It also covers monitoring during labor including vital signs, contractions, and fetal heart rate. Active management of labor is described which includes interventions like amniotomy and oxytocin if progress is unsatisfactory. The nurse's role in caring for the woman in the first stage is also summarized.
Role of physiotherapist in lactating motheramrit kaur
This document discusses the role of a physiotherapist in supporting lactating mothers. It begins by explaining how breastfeeding works, including milk production and let-down reflexes. It then covers why breastfeeding is beneficial for both mother and baby. The document provides detailed information on learning to breastfeed, including proper latching, positioning techniques, and signs of effective feeding. It discusses common breastfeeding problems like sore nipples and the physiotherapist's role in observation, assessment, and management. The goal of the physiotherapist is to ensure proper technique and address any issues to promote a comfortable breastfeeding relationship.
Breastfeeding provides significant health benefits to both infants and mothers by reducing the risk of various illnesses. The document discusses the physiology of lactation, including the roles of prolactin and oxytocin in milk production and ejection. It also covers common breastfeeding problems like low milk supply, mastitis, and breast abscess, providing diagnostic criteria and treatment recommendations. Maintaining proper latching, frequent feeding to stimulate supply, and emptying the breast are emphasized as ways to support breastfeeding success and maternal recovery from issues.
Normal labour is defined as spontaneous onset at term, with a single vertex fetus and no complications. Labour progresses through three stages: cervical dilation, birth of fetus, and delivery of placenta. Cervical dilation occurs in latent and active phases, with the active phase involving accelerated, maximum, and decelerated dilation. Uterine contractions and retraction of the upper uterine segment apply force to dilate the cervix around the presenting fetal part. Moulding of the fetal skull allows adaptation to the pelvis during birth.
Normal puerperium - Obstetrical and Gynecological NursingJaice Mary Joy
The word puerperium is originated from the Latin words ‘puer’ – child and ‘pams’ – bringing forth.
Also known as the post-partum, post-natal, or post-delivery period.
The mother during puerperium is termed as puerpera.
Postnatal care involves caring for both the mother and newborn after delivery. It is aimed at preventing complications, restoring the mother's health, establishing breastfeeding, and providing family planning services. Care of the mother is primarily the responsibility of obstetricians, while care of the newborn is a combined responsibility of obstetricians and pediatricians. The normal puerperium period lasts 6 weeks and involves physiological changes in the mother's body as well as lactation and care of the newborn. Postnatal exercises are also important during this period to aid recovery.
This document discusses principles of immediate newborn care. It outlines the key priorities for care on the first day of life which include: establishing respiration, circulation, temperature control, nutrition, waste elimination, prevention of infection, and establishing the infant-parent relationship. It then provides more detail on immediate newborn care, focusing on establishing a patent airway through proper positioning and suctioning techniques. It also discusses maintaining normal body temperature to prevent complications of cold stress. The goals of newborn care are to establish and maintain respirations, provide warmth, ensure safety, and identify any problems requiring attention.
This document discusses different types of bleeding that can occur during pregnancy and classifications of abortions. It defines abortion and lists some potential causes such as abnormal fetal formation or infection. Abortions are classified as spontaneous or induced, isolated or recurrent, legal or illegal. Different categories of abortions including threatened, inevitable, complete, incomplete, missed and septic abortions are defined. Each category lists typical clinical features, investigations, and treatment approaches. Nursing diagnoses related to abortions include pain, fear, knowledge deficit, anxiety, low self-esteem, and risks for issues like fluid deficit, infection, and maternal injury.
The document discusses breastfeeding and lactation management. It describes the anatomy and physiology of lactation, including the production of milk in the alveoli and its movement through ducts. The suckling hormonal reflex arc is explained, involving signals sent to the brain and release of prolactin and oxytocin in response to suckling. Advantages of breastfeeding are enumerated, such as immunological benefits from antibodies and growth factors. Proper techniques are outlined for breastfeeding, positioning, attachment and burping the infant. Guidelines are provided around breastfeeding frequency, exclusive breastfeeding for 6 months, and assessing milk supply. The composition of breast milk changes from colostrum to transitional to mature milk. Reasons for
Postpartum slides finals for the studentsBea Galang
The document discusses postpartum care and the postpartum period, which refers to the six weeks following childbirth. The key principles of postpartum care are to promote healing of the body, provide emotional support, establish successful lactation, and prevent complications. Genital changes include involution of the uterus and vagina. Lochia is present and changes color and consistency over time. Vital signs and weight change in the postpartum period. Establishing breastfeeding involves understanding milk production and providing instructions to the mother. The document also discusses newborn care including maintaining temperature and airway, assessment, identification, and nursery care procedures.
The document provides information on yoga practices for different stages of pregnancy:
1) In the first trimester, practices focus on stress reduction and avoiding dynamic asanas due to risk of abortion. The fetus' organ formation makes this a critical period.
2) The second trimester is a stable period for growing the baby and improving the mother's health. Practices aim to establish a steady yoga routine.
3) In the third trimester, most asanas cannot be done due to size. Emphasis is on preparation for labor and delivery. Shavasana is done on the left side and Badha Konasana is added by 36 weeks.
Lactation is the process of milk production in mammary glands that occurs after pregnancy. The major hormones that stimulate lactation are progesterone, estrogen, prolactin, and oxytocin. During pregnancy, estrogen and progesterone prepare the breasts for lactation by stimulating growth of the mammary ducts. After childbirth, levels of these hormones drop which triggers prolactin production and the onset of milk production. Oxytocin causes the let-down reflex when the baby suckles, expressing milk from the alveoli into ducts.
Mother and Baby Friendly Care: Principles of kangaroo mother careSaide OER Africa
Newborn Care was written for healthcare workers providing special care for newborn infants in level 2 hospitals. It covers: An essential tool in the initial and ongoing training and teaching of any healthcare worker – Miriam Adhikari, South African Journal of Child Health, Primary Newborn Care was written specifically for nurses, midwives and doctors who provide primary care for newborn infants in level 1 clinics and hospitals. It covers: Mother and Baby Friendly Care describes gentler, kinder, evidence-based ways of caring for women during pregnancy, labour and delivery. It also presents improved methods of providing infant care with an emphasis on kangaroo mother care and exclusive breastfeeding. It covers: mother-friendly care in pregnancy, a modern approach to normal labour, skin-to-skin care of infants, encouraging breastfeeding, a baby-friendly nursery.
This document discusses the physiology of labor and anesthesia during labor. It begins by defining labor as the process by which regular uterine contractions cause cervical dilation, usually resulting in fetus delivery after 22 weeks of pregnancy. Labor involves extensive physiological changes in the mother to allow fetus delivery through the birth canal. The document then covers classifications of labor, theories of labor onset, signs that precede labor, methods for assessing cervical readiness, characteristics of uterine contractions and labor stages. It discusses pain management techniques during labor, including non-medical and medical methods. The document provides details on various anesthesia techniques for labor like local infiltration and epidural anesthesia.
This document discusses essential newborn care including immediate basic care, hygiene measures, newborn nutrition, exclusive breastfeeding, immunization, and neonatal resuscitation. Immediate basic care involves delivering the baby on a warm towel, establishing an airway, ensuring warmth, assessment, eye care, cord clamping, skin care, vitamin K administration, and identification. Hygiene measures focus on rooming-in, initiating breastfeeding, observing for signs of disease, preventing infection, bladder/bowel care, and parental teaching. Newborn nutrition requires adequate fluid, calories, and a balanced composition of proteins, fats, carbohydrates, minerals and vitamins. Neonatal resuscitation follows the TABC approach of
Pathophysiology of Normal Labor:
A series of events that take place in female genital organs to expel the product of conception that are fetus, placenta, membranes) out of womb through the vagina into the outer world. We further describe pathogenesis and features of different stages of labor
This presentation summarizes exclusive breastfeeding and its benefits. It defines exclusive breastfeeding as feeding an infant only breastmilk for the first 6 months without any other food or liquids. The presentation outlines the anatomy and physiology of lactation, initiation of breastfeeding, proper positioning and attachment, assessing breastfeeding adequacy, common barriers, and advantages for both mother and baby. Exclusive breastfeeding provides ideal nutrition, lowers infection risk, and has therapeutic benefits for infant development and health.
This document outlines the development of an unborn fetus from conception to birth in 3 week increments. It describes how all major organs and body systems are established by week 8. Different viewpoints and abortion methods are discussed. The conservative view is that abortion is never permissible, while the liberal view is that it should always be a woman's choice. Moderate views support abortion only up to a certain stage of development or for limited reasons. Common abortion methods include drugs, dilation and curettage, and hysterotomy. Biblical and philosophical arguments are presented by both pro-life and pro-choice positions regarding when life begins and personhood.
The document summarizes key aspects of childbirth and newborn development, including:
1. Labor typically occurs in three stages, triggered by hormones like oxytocin and culminating with the baby passing through the birth canal.
2. Newborns have physical traits like lanugo and vernix that help with birth but disappear shortly after. Their health is often assessed using the Apgar scale.
3. Preterm or low birthweight babies face serious health risks but many develop normally with time. Factors like a mother's health can influence prematurity.
This document provides information on the stages of labor and management of the first stage of labor. It discusses the normal progression through the latent, active, and transition phases of the first stage. It also covers monitoring during labor including vital signs, contractions, and fetal heart rate. Active management of labor is described which includes interventions like amniotomy and oxytocin if progress is unsatisfactory. The nurse's role in caring for the woman in the first stage is also summarized.
Role of physiotherapist in lactating motheramrit kaur
This document discusses the role of a physiotherapist in supporting lactating mothers. It begins by explaining how breastfeeding works, including milk production and let-down reflexes. It then covers why breastfeeding is beneficial for both mother and baby. The document provides detailed information on learning to breastfeed, including proper latching, positioning techniques, and signs of effective feeding. It discusses common breastfeeding problems like sore nipples and the physiotherapist's role in observation, assessment, and management. The goal of the physiotherapist is to ensure proper technique and address any issues to promote a comfortable breastfeeding relationship.
Breastfeeding provides significant health benefits to both infants and mothers by reducing the risk of various illnesses. The document discusses the physiology of lactation, including the roles of prolactin and oxytocin in milk production and ejection. It also covers common breastfeeding problems like low milk supply, mastitis, and breast abscess, providing diagnostic criteria and treatment recommendations. Maintaining proper latching, frequent feeding to stimulate supply, and emptying the breast are emphasized as ways to support breastfeeding success and maternal recovery from issues.
Normal labour is defined as spontaneous onset at term, with a single vertex fetus and no complications. Labour progresses through three stages: cervical dilation, birth of fetus, and delivery of placenta. Cervical dilation occurs in latent and active phases, with the active phase involving accelerated, maximum, and decelerated dilation. Uterine contractions and retraction of the upper uterine segment apply force to dilate the cervix around the presenting fetal part. Moulding of the fetal skull allows adaptation to the pelvis during birth.
Normal puerperium - Obstetrical and Gynecological NursingJaice Mary Joy
The word puerperium is originated from the Latin words ‘puer’ – child and ‘pams’ – bringing forth.
Also known as the post-partum, post-natal, or post-delivery period.
The mother during puerperium is termed as puerpera.
Postnatal care involves caring for both the mother and newborn after delivery. It is aimed at preventing complications, restoring the mother's health, establishing breastfeeding, and providing family planning services. Care of the mother is primarily the responsibility of obstetricians, while care of the newborn is a combined responsibility of obstetricians and pediatricians. The normal puerperium period lasts 6 weeks and involves physiological changes in the mother's body as well as lactation and care of the newborn. Postnatal exercises are also important during this period to aid recovery.
This document discusses principles of immediate newborn care. It outlines the key priorities for care on the first day of life which include: establishing respiration, circulation, temperature control, nutrition, waste elimination, prevention of infection, and establishing the infant-parent relationship. It then provides more detail on immediate newborn care, focusing on establishing a patent airway through proper positioning and suctioning techniques. It also discusses maintaining normal body temperature to prevent complications of cold stress. The goals of newborn care are to establish and maintain respirations, provide warmth, ensure safety, and identify any problems requiring attention.
This document discusses different types of bleeding that can occur during pregnancy and classifications of abortions. It defines abortion and lists some potential causes such as abnormal fetal formation or infection. Abortions are classified as spontaneous or induced, isolated or recurrent, legal or illegal. Different categories of abortions including threatened, inevitable, complete, incomplete, missed and septic abortions are defined. Each category lists typical clinical features, investigations, and treatment approaches. Nursing diagnoses related to abortions include pain, fear, knowledge deficit, anxiety, low self-esteem, and risks for issues like fluid deficit, infection, and maternal injury.
The document discusses breastfeeding and lactation management. It describes the anatomy and physiology of lactation, including the production of milk in the alveoli and its movement through ducts. The suckling hormonal reflex arc is explained, involving signals sent to the brain and release of prolactin and oxytocin in response to suckling. Advantages of breastfeeding are enumerated, such as immunological benefits from antibodies and growth factors. Proper techniques are outlined for breastfeeding, positioning, attachment and burping the infant. Guidelines are provided around breastfeeding frequency, exclusive breastfeeding for 6 months, and assessing milk supply. The composition of breast milk changes from colostrum to transitional to mature milk. Reasons for
Postpartum slides finals for the studentsBea Galang
The document discusses postpartum care and the postpartum period, which refers to the six weeks following childbirth. The key principles of postpartum care are to promote healing of the body, provide emotional support, establish successful lactation, and prevent complications. Genital changes include involution of the uterus and vagina. Lochia is present and changes color and consistency over time. Vital signs and weight change in the postpartum period. Establishing breastfeeding involves understanding milk production and providing instructions to the mother. The document also discusses newborn care including maintaining temperature and airway, assessment, identification, and nursery care procedures.
The document provides information on yoga practices for different stages of pregnancy:
1) In the first trimester, practices focus on stress reduction and avoiding dynamic asanas due to risk of abortion. The fetus' organ formation makes this a critical period.
2) The second trimester is a stable period for growing the baby and improving the mother's health. Practices aim to establish a steady yoga routine.
3) In the third trimester, most asanas cannot be done due to size. Emphasis is on preparation for labor and delivery. Shavasana is done on the left side and Badha Konasana is added by 36 weeks.
Lactation is the process of milk production in mammary glands that occurs after pregnancy. The major hormones that stimulate lactation are progesterone, estrogen, prolactin, and oxytocin. During pregnancy, estrogen and progesterone prepare the breasts for lactation by stimulating growth of the mammary ducts. After childbirth, levels of these hormones drop which triggers prolactin production and the onset of milk production. Oxytocin causes the let-down reflex when the baby suckles, expressing milk from the alveoli into ducts.
Mother and Baby Friendly Care: Principles of kangaroo mother careSaide OER Africa
Newborn Care was written for healthcare workers providing special care for newborn infants in level 2 hospitals. It covers: An essential tool in the initial and ongoing training and teaching of any healthcare worker – Miriam Adhikari, South African Journal of Child Health, Primary Newborn Care was written specifically for nurses, midwives and doctors who provide primary care for newborn infants in level 1 clinics and hospitals. It covers: Mother and Baby Friendly Care describes gentler, kinder, evidence-based ways of caring for women during pregnancy, labour and delivery. It also presents improved methods of providing infant care with an emphasis on kangaroo mother care and exclusive breastfeeding. It covers: mother-friendly care in pregnancy, a modern approach to normal labour, skin-to-skin care of infants, encouraging breastfeeding, a baby-friendly nursery.
This document discusses the physiology of labor and anesthesia during labor. It begins by defining labor as the process by which regular uterine contractions cause cervical dilation, usually resulting in fetus delivery after 22 weeks of pregnancy. Labor involves extensive physiological changes in the mother to allow fetus delivery through the birth canal. The document then covers classifications of labor, theories of labor onset, signs that precede labor, methods for assessing cervical readiness, characteristics of uterine contractions and labor stages. It discusses pain management techniques during labor, including non-medical and medical methods. The document provides details on various anesthesia techniques for labor like local infiltration and epidural anesthesia.
This document discusses essential newborn care including immediate basic care, hygiene measures, newborn nutrition, exclusive breastfeeding, immunization, and neonatal resuscitation. Immediate basic care involves delivering the baby on a warm towel, establishing an airway, ensuring warmth, assessment, eye care, cord clamping, skin care, vitamin K administration, and identification. Hygiene measures focus on rooming-in, initiating breastfeeding, observing for signs of disease, preventing infection, bladder/bowel care, and parental teaching. Newborn nutrition requires adequate fluid, calories, and a balanced composition of proteins, fats, carbohydrates, minerals and vitamins. Neonatal resuscitation follows the TABC approach of
Pathophysiology of Normal Labor:
A series of events that take place in female genital organs to expel the product of conception that are fetus, placenta, membranes) out of womb through the vagina into the outer world. We further describe pathogenesis and features of different stages of labor
This presentation summarizes exclusive breastfeeding and its benefits. It defines exclusive breastfeeding as feeding an infant only breastmilk for the first 6 months without any other food or liquids. The presentation outlines the anatomy and physiology of lactation, initiation of breastfeeding, proper positioning and attachment, assessing breastfeeding adequacy, common barriers, and advantages for both mother and baby. Exclusive breastfeeding provides ideal nutrition, lowers infection risk, and has therapeutic benefits for infant development and health.
This document outlines the development of an unborn fetus from conception to birth in 3 week increments. It describes how all major organs and body systems are established by week 8. Different viewpoints and abortion methods are discussed. The conservative view is that abortion is never permissible, while the liberal view is that it should always be a woman's choice. Moderate views support abortion only up to a certain stage of development or for limited reasons. Common abortion methods include drugs, dilation and curettage, and hysterotomy. Biblical and philosophical arguments are presented by both pro-life and pro-choice positions regarding when life begins and personhood.
This document discusses the physiology of lactation and breastfeeding. It begins with the anatomy of the breast and describes how lactation occurs in the first two days following delivery as colostrum production increases. It emphasizes the importance of exclusive breastfeeding for infant health and nutrition. Specific recommendations are provided around preparing for breastfeeding, proper positioning and latching techniques, feeding frequency and duration, and burping the infant. The benefits of exclusive breastfeeding for both mother and baby are highlighted.
The document provides information on common physiological changes, complications, and nursing care during the postpartum period. It discusses uterine involution, lochia, breast changes, weight loss, and psychological adaptation to motherhood. Potential complications addressed include postpartum hemorrhage, puerperal infection, mastitis, thrombophlebitis, and subinvolution. Nursing goals are outlined to promote healing, prevent infection, establish breastfeeding, and support the new mother.
Breastfeeding , Breast Anatomy, Proper way of breastfeeding Hussain Ali
This document provides a guide for new parents on breastfeeding. It discusses breast anatomy, the composition and benefits of breast milk including colostrum. It describes the process of breastfeeding including proper positioning and latching on. The document outlines the benefits of breastfeeding for both baby and mother, including improved immunity, bonding, and reduced cancer risks. Common breast conditions are also reviewed such as clogged ducts, infections and discharge. The guide recommends breastfeeding frequently in the newborn period and gradually less with age up to 6 months at minimum.
This document provides information on essential newborn care including maintaining temperature, establishing breathing, vitamin K injection, breastfeeding initiation and daily routine care like warmth, feeding, bathing and observation. It discusses Apgar scoring and harmful traditional practices. Key aspects of care include cleanliness, warmth, breastfeeding and monitoring of vital signs and growth. Nursing diagnoses related to airway, thermoregulation and infection risk are also mentioned.
Breastfeeding provides optimal nutrition for infants and benefits both mother and baby. It involves the feeding of an infant with breast milk from the female breast. Breast milk is produced when suckling stimulates the release of prolactin and oxytocin, which causes milk production and ejection from the alveoli into ducts. Breast milk contains proteins, fats, carbohydrates, vitamins, and minerals essential for infant growth and development as well as protection from disease. Proper positioning and latch are important to establish successful breastfeeding and adequate milk production.
The document summarizes the stages of childbirth from calculating the due date to delivery of the placenta. It describes what happens as the mother nears full term, the three stages of labor (labor, birth of baby, birth of placenta), signs that labor has begun, dilation and effacement of the cervix, managing pain during labor, pushing and delivery of the baby, cutting the umbilical cord, examining the placenta, and the effects of oxytocin after delivery.
The document summarizes the stages of childbirth from calculating the due date to delivery of the placenta. It describes what happens as the mother nears full term, the three stages of labor (labor, birth of baby, birth of placenta), signs that labor has begun, dilation and effacement of the cervix, managing pain during labor, pushing and delivery of the baby, cutting the umbilical cord, examining the placenta, and the roles of hormones after birth.
Kangaroo Mother Care (KMC) involves skin-to-skin contact between a mother and a low birth weight or preterm infant. Three key components of KMC are kangaroo position, exclusive breastfeeding, and follow up care. KMC provides physiological benefits like improved temperature regulation and oxygenation as well as developmental benefits like better sleep patterns and bonding. KMC can reduce mortality rates for vulnerable infants and is recommended by the WHO as a standard of care. During the COVID-19 pandemic, KMC is still encouraged while following safety precautions.
This document provides information about what to expect during parturition (birthing) in sheep and goats. It discusses gestation length, signs that birth is impending, the three stages of birth (preparatory, labor, and cleaning), ensuring newborns receive colostrum, and aftercare including clipping the umbilical cord, providing warmth, and monitoring nursing. The key points are that birth typically occurs unassisted, it is important for newborns to consume colostrum within 24 hours for immunity, and farmers should provide support as needed while otherwise interfering as little as possible in the natural birthing process.
Babies born before 37 weeks of gestation are considered premature. Premature babies may have difficulties eating, breathing, and regulating their body temperature on their own. They are cared for in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) where they are closely monitored and receive support through medical equipment and technologies. Kangaroo care, where the baby is held skin-to-skin on the parent's chest, helps premature babies gain weight and form close bonds with their parents. Parents can also support their premature baby's development through gentle touch, talking, and participating in basic care activities once the baby is stable.
Breastfeeding involves feeding an infant breast milk directly from the female breast. It provides optimal nutrition for infant growth and development while also promoting bonding between mother and child. The let-down reflex occurs when suckling stimulates hormones like prolactin and oxytocin to produce milk. Breastfeeding provides benefits for both mother and baby such as reducing cancer and infection risks. It is recommended for at least the first six months of an infant's life.
Breastfeeding provides essential nutrition for infant development. It involves the feeding of breast milk directly from the female breast to the infant via lactation. Breast milk is produced when infant suckling stimulates the release of prolactin and oxytocin, which causes milk production and ejection from the alveoli into the ducts. Breast milk contains proteins, fats, vitamins, carbohydrates and other components that support infant growth and immunity. Proper positioning and latching are important to successfully establish breastfeeding. Most major health organizations recommend exclusive breastfeeding for six months and continued breastfeeding for at least one year.
Babies born before 37 weeks of gestation are considered premature. Premature babies often require care in a Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) as their organs are not fully developed. In the NICU, premature babies receive monitoring, respiratory support if needed, and are fed through tubes or IVs initially. Kangaroo care, where the baby is held skin to skin, helps with temperature regulation, breastfeeding, and weight gain. As the baby develops, parents can help with diaper changes, baths, and taking temperatures. The goal is for the baby to gain weight and develop enough to be able to eat and breathe on their own.
This document provides guidance on newborn care and management. It discusses immediate newborn care steps like drying and warming the baby. It outlines the criteria for a normal healthy newborn and basic newborn needs like temperature regulation and breastfeeding initiation. The document also covers newborn resuscitation procedures if breathing issues arise, including steps for bag and mask ventilation and chest compressions. Potential risk factors for breathing problems and ensuring proper equipment is emphasized.
This document provides a detailed overview of fetal development from conception through birth in 3-4 sentence increments. It describes the key developmental milestones that occur each week such as the formation of organs and limbs. The document also outlines the various abortion methods used at different stages of pregnancy, including suction, dilation and curettage, RU-486, saline injections, prostaglandins, hysterotomy, and partial birth abortion. The goal is to educate about the life of the unborn child and the abortion techniques employed.
normal newborn ppt by Shrutika Dhongade.pptxRaniDhongade
normal newborn or assessment of normal newborn
definition of a normal newborn
characteristics of a normal newborn
care of a normal newborn
anthropometric assessment of a normal newborn
terminologies used to describe the abormalities in the newborn
nursing care to be provided to the newborn
seminar on newborn
ppt on normal newborn
examination of newborn
care of nweborn given at birth
cord clamping and ligate the cord
This document discusses breastfeeding, including the anatomy and physiology of lactation, composition of human breast milk, techniques for optimal breastfeeding, positions, benefits to infants and mothers, barriers, and the role of family physicians. Key points include that breastfeeding provides essential nutrients for newborn growth, exclusive breastfeeding is recommended for 6 months, skin-to-skin contact after delivery enhances breastfeeding, and benefits include reduced infant infection and obesity risk as well as lower cancer risk for mothers. Barriers include lack of confidence and support as well as physical issues.
Similar to Ho c6 c7 120912 90m breastfeeding behavior frequency wna (20)
Ho c6 c7 120912 90m breastfeeding behavior frequency wna
1. A Neurobehavioral
Approach to Breastfeeding
Dr Nils Bergman
”M.D., D.C.H., M.P.H., Ph.D.”
Cape Town, South Africa
www.kangaroomothercare.com
2. BIRTH
S S C
Breastfeeding behaviour
Breastfeeding WIRING
BREASTFEEDING
SENSORY BRAIN
stimulation nutrition
STATE organization
Feeding frequency
SLEEP cycling
ON-GOING
S S C
BRAIN
WIRING
3. THE “OLD” BRAIN HAS
3 PROGRAMMES
DEFENCE NUTRITION REPRODUCTION
11. Clinics in Perinatology,
June 2004, Vol 31(2) page 210
Stanley Graven
Early neurosensory visual
development of fetus and newborn.
“It is a serious mistake to assume that the
principles derived from careful animal studies
do not apply to human infants.
The risk of suppression or disruption of
needed neural
processes ...
12. All mammals have set sequence
of behaviours at birth ………….
……. All with a
single purpose : to
BREASTFEED
13. After birth, events are
determined …
… by the neonate
stimulating the mother!
(Rosenblatt 1994)
15. The “habitat - niche” concept
HABITAT
DETERMINES
BEHAVIOUR
16. The “habitat - niche” concept
BEHAVIOUR
ENSURES
BIOLOGICAL
NEEDS
17. Warming, feeding and
protection behaviours are
intricately, inseparably
linked to the right place.
(Alberts 1994)
= NUTRITION PROGRAMME
18. In all mammals …….
….. the newborn is
responsible for
initiating
breastfeeding,
not the mother !!
19. In all mammals …….
….. the newborn is
responsible for
initiating
breastfeeding,
not the mother !!
EXCEPT IN HUMAN ???
20. Sequence human newborn breast-feeding
Pre-requisite = habitat
hand to mouth
tongue moves
mouth moves
eye focuses nipple
crawls to nipple
latches to nipple
suckles
(Widstrom et al 1994)
21.
22.
23. “The newborn may appear
helpless, but displays an
impressive and purposeful
motor activity which, without
maternal assistance, brings the
baby to the nipple.
(Michelson et al 1996)
24. “The newborn may appear
helpless, but
raises its own temperature,
has a higher blood glucose,
metabolic adaptation faster.
(Widstrom 1987)
25. METABOLIC ADAPTATION
SSC started in the first
20 minutes after birth
SSC Cot
Blood glucose (1 hr) 3.17 2.56
Base excess drop 3.4 1.8
(Christenson 1992)
27. Animal literature does not talk
about mammalian lactation,
it talks about mammalian birth.
Ruin the birth – and
there is no lactation
With a good birth,
lactation follows
Diane Weissinger
28. PSN envisions a community that
embraces its mothers and babies, and
values the unique
opportunity at birth
to impact the physical and emotional
well-being of the newborn.
29. Target #1 for 2005:
Report that 65% of infants are
placed and remain in
direct skin to skin contact
with their mothers
for at least one hour
during the first 3 hours after birth.
35. Animal literature does not talk
about mammalian lactation,
it talks about mammalian birth.
Ruin the birth – and
there is no lactation
With a good birth,
lactation follows
Diane Weissinger
40. Step 1 SKIN-TO-SKIN
Continuous skin contact
The newborn must be in the right
environment for the behaviours that
it is capable of to be expressed. It
requires protection from stress and
provision of warmth.
KMC provides the “maternal nest”
1
SSC
Ideally this should be done on prematures AT BIRTH.
However it can be done later, even with nasogastric tube
providing expressed breast milk in the meantime
41. Step 2 and 3 Olfactory
The first steps in sequence
require smell of the nipple
which may take longer in
the premature,
and then the smelling of milk.
Babies can identify smells and
tastes from their time in the
uterus in the mother’s milk!
2
3
Smell nipple
Smell milk
42. 4
5
Step 4 Taste
This is re-inforcing the smell.
Fullterm seems to skip this!
Step 5 Rooting
These are mouth movements
the normal sequence
described in the full-terms.
Here the premature
requires help, with position
and “sipping”
= feeling milk in mouth
Taste milk
Rooting
Sipping
43. 6
Step 6 First suckling.
Key step, builds on steps 1 to 5.
Must be awake and alert.
Alert period is maximal at birth,
and lasts 45 - 90 minutes.
If missed then, will require feeding,
and several hours delay.
Alert
for
Suckling
44. 6
Step 6 First suckling.
Note difference suckling vs sucking!
“ … myographically distinct”
For late premature lactation, allow
suckling to develop in successive
alert periods, while feeding by tube.
Alert
for
Suckling
45. From 16 or 20 weeks gestation,
the fetus is swallowing.
From 26 or 28 weeks gestation
the fetus can SUCKLE
From 36 weeks gestation the
fetus is able to SUCK
SUCKING and SUCKLING
sound same, but VERY different
Breastfeeding & Suckling
46. 7
Step 7 Latching & swallowing
Premature is too physically
weak to crawl to nipple,
but if held to nipple will at
this stage latch on.
Once latched, suckling follows.
Suckling squirts a
controlled dose of milk
to the back of throat, which
is safely swallowed without any
interference of breathing
This is INNATE.
Latching
Swallowing
47. 8
Breast meal
Step 8 First breast milk meal.
Steps 1 to 7 and on take place
rapidly in the fullterm.
They can occur in the first
alert period after birth in a
premature if allowed to,but
may require a longer period
of defined steps in successive
alert periods. For late prem
lactation, step 8 is the first
time milk is swallowed
Enough to feed the baby.
48. 9
10
Frequent feeding
Together
continuously
Step 9 Frequent feeding
In utero, baby is feeding
Continuously.
Demand feeding
is NOT SUITABLE f
or prematures.
Feeds should be at
most 2 hours apart.
Step 10
Together continuously
52. THE NEWBORN
also has a larynx that meets the
uvula, designed to separate the
respiratory tract from the
gastrointestinal tract ,
enabling the newborn to feed
and breathe simultaneously.
53. Bottle
Breast
Baseline
pO2
Baseline
pO2
Start feed Ends feed 10 min later
Sucking
burst
Rest
Takes longer
Suckling
continuous
Non-nutritive
Sucking
burst
Meier 1988
BOTTLE AND BREASTFEEDING IN PREMATURE
Prematures babies weighing 1300g and 34/40 PCA,
given alternating bottle and breastfeeds.
54. (Chen et al 2000)
25 babies in 80 sessions, all <1800g
“There were 2 episodes of apnea and 20
episodes of oxygen desaturation during bottle-
feeding and none during breastfeeding.
We conclude that breastfeeding is a more
physiological feeding method for the preterm
infant and bottle-feeding may be more
stressful.”
BOTTLEFEEDING
IS STRESSFUL
and DANGEROUS
55. SUCKLING uses the largest muscle in
the baby’s head, making
the smallest movement
SUCKING requires lots of tiny and
weak muscles, making
maximum effort,
… also causes hypoxia,
… and is STRESSFUL !
56. Bottle feeding requires SUCKING,
which requires completely different
muscles, and does NOT allow co-
ordination between swallowing and
breathing. Bottle feeding causes STRESS in
prematures, and relative post-prandial hypoxaemia.
SUCKLING - in and of itself,
apart from nutrition intake -
has beneficial effects
on both mother and baby.
SENSORY STIMULATION ....
57. Suckling
induces simultaneous endocrine
effects in the gut
of both mother and child
there is a physiological
symbiosis between them.
Breast feeding also has psychic effects;
CCK is produced,
which induces sedation and sleep.
59. Simplified scale -
HARD CRYING
CRYING
FUSSING
ACTIVE AWAKE
QUIET AWAKE
ALERT INACTIVE
DROWSY
ACTIVE SLEEP
IRREGULAR SLEEP
QUIET SLEEP
DEEP SLEEP
L to R shunting, IVH risk
Stressful, wastes calories,
… build up to stress
This is feeding zone!
Time to connect - stimulation
… transition zone
… transition zone
… activity consumes calories
Good sleep - digestion zone
Apnoea zone !!
STATE ORGANISATION.
60. Simplified scale -
HARD CRYING
CRYING
FUSSING
ACTIVE AWAKE
QUIET AWAKE
ALERT INACTIVE
DROWSY
ACTIVE SLEEP
IRREGULAR SLEEP
QUIET SLEEP
DEEP SLEEP
Incubator
SSC
61. Simplified scale -
HARD CRYING
CRYING
FUSSING
ACTIVE AWAKE
QUIET AWAKE
ALERT INACTIVE
DROWSY
ACTIVE SLEEP
IRREGULAR SLEEP
QUIET SLEEP
DEEP SLEEP
risk
stress
feeding
stimulation
digestion
apnoea
KMC babies oscillate slowly in safe zones
Separated babies oscillate
erratically to danger zones
63. Not so much duration,
or density of any sleep stage,
or number of sleep stage episodes, but,
cycling between quiet sleep
and active sleep
is what is important
64. SLEEP CYCLING –
Separation vs contact
In SSC:
• Normal cycling
• Non-chaotic pattern
48 hour baseline chaotic pattern of
activity and quiet HR & RR
Pre-KC SSC
65. “The newborn may appear
helpless, but displays an
impressive and purposeful
motor activity which, without
maternal assistance, brings the
baby to the nipple.
(Michelson et al 1996)
71. SEES
Mum’s eyes
Hand TOUCH
Mum’s skin
Skin-to-skin
CONTACT
SENSATIONS THAT WIRE BRAIN
Back FEELS
Mum’s arm
holding
TASTES
Mum’s milk
Ear HEARS
Mum’s voice
SMELLS
Mum’s milk
WARMED on
Mum’s front
MOVES
with Mum
Slide from JILL BERGMAN
72. TRIGLYCERIDE
Left : glycerol,
Right: palmitic acid,
oleic acid, alpha-linolenic acid
In phosphoglycerides,
glycerol molecule same:
two fatty acids esterified
Phospholipids are
a major component of all
biological membranes,
Sphingomyelin particularly
concentrated in BRAIN
major part of MYELIN.
80. Be sure the wet nurse has plenty of milk ...
because if she lacks it she may give the baby
milk of a goat or sheep or some other animal,
because the child ... nourished on animal milk
does not have perfect wits like one fed on
woman’s milk and always looks stupid and
vacant and not right in the head.
14th century Tuscan text
83. Human Milk Banking Association
of North America
•Setting the Standards for Human Milk Banking
•Meeting the Milk Banking Needs for North America
•A Safe Alternative in the Absence of Infant's Own Mother's
This website is designed to provide information on
milk banking and how to contact a milk bank to
donate milk or to order donor human milk. This
site is also a resource for health care providers and
others who are looking for information on
HMBANA's resources and services.
http://www.hmbana.org/
84. "Where it is not possible for the biological
mother to breastfeed, the first alternative, if
available, should be the use of human breast
milk from other sources. Human milk banks
should be made available in appropriate
situations."
World Health Organization/United
Nations Children's Fund
http://www.breastmilkproject.org/
85. INFANT FEEDING FREQUENCY:
available evidence & neuroscience
References in this format
OVERVIEW:
New section this background
Neuroscience
Anatomy & physiology
Available evidence
Proposal feeding frequency
Implications
85
86. "I have finally cum to the konklusion
that a good reliable set ov bowels
iz worth more to a man
than enny quantity of brains.“
Josh Billings
http://www.vivo.colostate.edu/hbooks/pathphys/digestion/stomach/anatomy.html
88. The digestive system is endowed with its
own, local nervous system referred to as
the enteric or intrinsic nervous system.
The magnitude and complexity of the enteric
nervous system is immense - it contains as
many neurons as the spinal cord.
ENTERIC NERVOUS SYSTEM !!
88
90. Functional at end of first trimester,
begins very early, experience dependent
“effective from 29w GA” significant
SMELL
“Olfaction in the fetal and
premature infant:
functional status and
clinical implications”
Benoist SCHAAL
ENS
ANS Breast
Sensory environment :
Intrusive
(pain) Supportive
Internal
Somatic
environment
Expected
external
environment
Schaal 2004 90
91. modulates state organisation
elicits emotional behaviours
activates pre-feeding actions
anticipatory digestive physiology
regulates pace of ingestive behaviour
SMELL
Schaal 2004 91
92. Perinatal brains show
orientations towards
“neonatal olfactory
expectations”
When provided:
calming, autonomic orientation, active
approach, metabolic conservation.
When not fulfilled:
withdrawal, autonomic defense & distress
behaviours, metabolic expenditure
Schaal 2004 92
93. DOUCET
The secretion of Areolar (Montgomery‟s) Glands from
Lactating Women Elicits Selective, Unconditional
Responses in Neonates
“… breast chemosignals
activate oral activity on the
nipple that releases a cascade
of behavioral, neural, neuroendocrine
and endocrine processes
in the newborn and the mother.”
Doucet 2009 93
94. The secretion of Areolar
(Montgomery‟s) Glands
“In early ontogeny the
sleeping brain may thus
remain sentient of an
organism‟s odor
environment.”
Doucet 2009 94
95. INFANT FEEDING FREQUENCY:
available evidence & neuroscience
OVERVIEW:
Neuroscience
Anatomy & physiology
Available evidence
Proposal feeding frequency
Implications
95
97. Fetal stomach appears 4 weeks GA.
By 11 weeks, wall capable of muscular
contraction.
“Patterns of antropyloric motility
in fed healthy preterm infants”
... the neuroregulatory mechanisms
responsible for the coordination of antro-
pyloric motility and gastric emptying are
well developed by 30 weeks of PMA.
Hassan 2002 97
98. Hydrochloric acid
important for activation of pepsinogen,
inactivation of microorganisms such as bacteria.
Pepsinogen
activated by acid into active pepsin,
responsible for the stomach's ability to initiate
digestion of proteins.
Chymosin
is an enzyme whose role is to curdle or
coagulate milk in the stomach, a process of
considerable importance in the very young animal.
98
99. Chymosin
makes the milk into “cheese”
halfway between liquid and solid
stomach empties in 60 minutes
milk
99
100. Gut hormones.
20 different hormones
work in the gut –
regulated by the vagal nerve.
Each has a specific function.
Uvnas-Moberg 1989 100
102. Gut hormones.
"Bad guy" - SOMATOSTATIN:
(produced by fetus, rise 10-fold under stress)
inhibits gastrointestinal secretion,
inhibits motility ,
reduces blood flow to gut
and absorption,
causes gastric retention,
vomiting, constipation.
Uvnas-Moberg 1989 102
103. SOMATOSTATIN:
inhibits the good hormones,
contributes to
slow weight gain.
At high levels also
inhibits release of
growth hormone.
Uvnas-Moberg 1989 103
104. It takes 30 to 60 minutes
of SSC to lower somatostatin
and other stress hormones
SSC &
SLEEP
VITAL !!!
104
105. The “niche” (occupation) of a neonate (Alberts)
BOND FEED
SLEEP SLEEP
PLAY FEED
Alberts 1994 105
106. Enteric Nervous System
The “niche” (occupation) of a neonate (Alberts)
BOND FEED
SLEEP SLEEP
PLAY FEED
106
115. Formula for calculation of stomach capacity (Charles Bradshaw, UCT)
Assumptions: the stomach can be approximated by dividing into
three sections, namely a ellipsoidal hemisphere, an ellipsoidal cylinder,
and a skewed ellipsoidal cone.
Variables: a = anteroposterior radius, t = transverse radius, l = length stomach
Relations: the height of the cone and the hemisphere are both the same as „a‟.
Ellipsoid = 4/3 * Pi* r1*r2*r3 = 4/3 *Pi * a * a * t;
therefore volume of hemisphere = 2/3 Pi * a *a * t
Cylinder = Area of base * height = (Pi * a * t ) * ( l - 2a )
Skewed cone = 1/3 * base *height = 1/3 * Pi * a * t * a
Total volume = 2/3 * Pi *a*a*t + Pi * a * t * (l- 2a) + 1/3 * Pi * a * t * a
=Pi a*t*l -Pi * a *a*t
= Pi * a * t*(l-a)
Goldstein and Sase data:
Stomach capacity at term 10 - 15 ml
BRADSHAW formula
115
116. Assumption: 2,5 kg baby 33w GA,
requiring 150 ml/kg/day = 375 ml
45 MIN CYCLES ( 32 cycles/day)
12 ML PER CYCLE = 384 ml116
117. Newborn stomach volume.
Gastric volumes at birth
Correlated with gastric pH,
gastrin and somatostatin
“fetus drinks 10 ml portions
of amniotic fluid …”
Widstrom 1988 117
118. Only recent study located:
“Autopsy” capacity was determined
in Indian post-mortem studies
100 autopsies (63 SB, 37 ENND)
Tied at cardia and pylorus, filled with
water, emptied & measured, repeated,
“… obliteration of the gastric curvatures”
“due care to minimize stretch artifacts”
Naveed 1992
“An Autopsy Study of Relationship between
Perinatal Stomach Capacity and Birth Weight.”
118
119. Infants above 2500g only:
Ave Range
Stillborn (n 11) 19.6 ml (10-35)
Early death (n 9) 17.8 ml (10-25)
All cases (n 20) 18.8 ml
Naveed 1992
“An Autopsy Study of Relationship between
Perinatal Stomach Capacity and Birth Weight.”
119
120. 120
KERNESSUK 1997 (Russian)
Postmortem: in situ measures
(applied Bradshaw formula)
Ave
Newborn (n 11) 15 ml
2 months (n 11) 35 ml
2-4 m (n 10) 50 ml
4-6 m (n 8) 100 ml
121. Known references with data:
Scammon and Doyle 1920
Zuccarelli‟s method: stomach filled at
autopsy to “a pressure of between
15 and 20 centimeters of water”
Scammon 1920
“Observations of the capacity of the stomach in
the first ten days of post natal life.”
121
122. Anatomic capacity was determined
in post-mortem studies
Main data set Alliot 1905 (n 25)
Scammon own cases ? (n 13)
30 – 35 ml at birth –
almost regardless of birth weight
Scammon 1920
“Observations of the capacity of the stomach in
the first ten days of post natal life.”
122
123. Known references with data:
Scammon and Doyle 1920
quoted in Silverman 1961
14571 feeding records from 323 newborns
“physiologic capacity” all breastfed
test weighing before and after feeding
Scammon 1920
“Observations of the capacity of the stomach in
the first ten days of post natal life.”
123
124. “… modern infant feeding.”
“infants were breastfed 5 times per day”
INFERENCE?? If fed 5 x per day
and daily requirement 160 ml x 3kg = 480
Required volume: 480 / 5 = 96 mls
Did not measure stomach capacity:
Pre-determined a feeding frequency!
Scammon 1920 124
125. “… modern infant feeding.” 5 per day
Did not measure stomach capacity:
Pre-determined a feeding frequency!
“ … the figures … presented here are
distinctly higher than those of earlier
investigators … not surprising considering
… (they) made their observations upon
infants which were fed eight or more
times per day.”
Scammon 1920 125
126. Imagine a study !!
Let us measure the stomach capacity
with a balloon ... at end of NGT
Test the pressure on adults
must not be uncomfortable
Once the pressure starts to rise:
there is risk for reflux
to be avoided – expected physiology
THIS SHOULD BE THE
STOMACH CAPACITY
126
127. Imagined study was done!!
Zangen S et al 2001
Rapid Maturation of Gastric Relaxation
in Newborn Infants
Zangen 2001
No reference given ....
127
75 ml per feeding
128. Zangen S et al
Rapid maturation of gastric relaxation in newborns
Pressures (mmHg)
Balloon inflates to
15 ml no increase
functional
capacity
128
129. TERMINOLOGY PROPOSALS
“Functional capacity”
equivalent to “expectation volume”,
for which optimal pepsin / acid is made,
does not cause distention
allows adequate time for curdle
allows protein breakdown
allows controlled pyloric passage
129
130. Zangen S et al
Rapid maturation of gastric relaxation in newborns
Pressures (mmHg)
Balloon inflates to
15 ml no increase
20 ml pressure OK
physiological
capacity …. 130
131. TERMINOLOGY PROPOSALS
Physiological capacity
Maximal amount stomach can handle
without undue stress.
“Receptive capacity” of STOMACH
maximal amount stretched organ holds
“Ingestive capacity” of BABY
amount baby or infant swallowed,
(note, excess not in stomach) 131
132. Physiological capacity
Maximal amount stomach can handle
without undue stress.
“Receptive capacity” of STOMACH
maximal amount stretched organ holds
“Ingestive capacity” of BABY
amount baby or infant swallowed,
(note, excess not in stomach)
Scammon and Doyle did draw attention to this also ....
132
133. EVIDENCE: (NBn 111009)
Author Capacity Note:
Sase 10-15 ml Live, term fetus
Goldstein 10-15 ml Live, term fetus
Widstrom 10 mls Live, newborn
Zangen 20 mls Live, (pressure)
Naveed 20 mls Autopsy (SB)
20 mls Autopsy (ENND)
Kernessuk 15 mls Autopsy (in situ)
Scammon 30-35 ml Autopsy (water
(Alliot) pressure)133
140. Normal physiology of the
Enteric Nervous System
“Small and frequent feeds,
according to the sleep cycle”
The “niche” (occupation) of a neonate (Alberts)
BOND FEED
SLEEP SLEEP
PLAY FEED
140
141. INFANT FEEDING FREQUENCY:
available evidence & neuroscience
OVERVIEW:
Neuroscience
Anatomy & physiology
Available evidence
Proposal feeding frequency
Implications
141
142. Zangen S et al
Rapid maturation of gastric relaxation in newborns
A balloon in stomach
can fill to 76 mls
What does the
stomach –
without a balloon –
do to 76 mls?
REFLUX !!!
PRESUME: each feed
approximately 75 mls
Zangen 2001 142
143. WHERE IS THE MILK?
This volume
is not in
the stomach
Stomach
Stomach
Stomach
143
144. WHERE IS THE MILK?
Mother’s shoulder
Oesophagus
Duodenum
Duodenum
Stomach
Stomach
Stomach
How To Do Just About
Everything
How to Burp a Baby
Burping a baby
can reduce
spitting up and
relieve bloating
caused by
swallowed air.
Here are some
tried-and-true
methods.
144
146. WHERE IS THE MILK?
What happens when my baby
spits up?
Babies spit up when they've eaten
too much or when they're burped. It
can also happen when your baby is
drooling.
Spitting up is not vomiting.
Spitting up is REFLUX.
Nils Bergman, 2011
146
147. Blood sugar may fall …
after 90 minutes ...
“There is a
reason behind
everything
in nature” Aristotle
Would nature allow this?
147
149. Large volume feeds
stretched stomach=
doubled absorptive
capacity as adult
Stettler 2005
Stettler et al
Weight Gain in the First Week of Life and Overweight in Adulthood:
A Cohort Study of European American Subjects Fed Infant Formula
149
150. This finding is important,
not so much to predict
which infants are at risk
for becoming overweight
adults, but more to under-
stand the importance of
the human physiology
of programming during
short early-life periods
on the development of
chronic disease over the
life course.
Stettler et al
Weight Gain in the First Week of Life and Overweight in Adulthood:
A Cohort Study of European American Subjects Fed Infant Formula
150
152. Developmental Care of the
Enteric Nervous System
“Small and frequent feeds, according
to the sleep cycle”
The “niche” (occupation) of a neonate (Alberts)
BOND FEED
SLEEP SLEEP
PLAY FEED
152
162. The first Milk Ejection Reflex
(MER)
elicited in < 2 minutes
works quickly
swallowed 1 minute
Feeding time (max)
3 minutes
Repeat every 1 hour
Prime 2007
163. The “normal” or usual and
common breastfeed
takes 15 minutes
discomfort after
burping time 5 minutes
Feeding time 20 min
Repeat every 3 hours
Prime 2007
164. 3 minute 20ml feeds x 24/d = 72 minutes
20 minute 60ml feeds x 8/d = 160 minutes
SMALL AND FREQUENT FEEDS
ARE EFFICIENT !!!!
FEWER NURSES NEEDED !!!
165. The calculated daily
requirement for a 3kg
baby can be given
without increase in
pressure ....
MINIMAL RISK
PARENTS CAN DO
SAFELY !
20 mls x 24 feeds
= 480mls / day
Zangen 2001 165
167. First two days: COLOSTRUM
15 mls / day (Paula Meier)
“one teaspoon,
three times a day”
From third day: MILK
small frequent feeds
(on demand)
between sleeps
Available from Geddes Productions
168. Infant feeding frequency:
Proposal based on available
evidence and neuroscience
“Small and
frequent feeds,
adjusted to
the sleep cycle”
168
169. In the past, whether
to breastfeed or not
was a lifestyle choice.
Our new knowledge of the brain
makes breastfeeding
a public health issue.
(Gail Storr, Fredericton, NB)