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TIME: Almanac 1995
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1994-09-09
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<text id=94TT1067>
<title>
Aug. 22, 1994: Health:When Breast-Feeding Fails
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Aug. 22, 1994 Stee-rike!
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
HEALTH, Page 63
When Breast-Feeding Fails
</hdr>
<body>
<p> Low-milk syndrome poses a rare but frightening risk
</p>
<p>By Christine Gorman--Reported by Alice Park/New York City
</p>
<p> At 6 lbs. 5 oz., Bradley Erwin looked like a healthy baby when
he was born last March. He just didn't seem to get the hang
of breast-feeding. His mother Kimberly, 38, a medical technician,
tried to nurse him. "He would bob his head, root and try to
latch on, but he wasn't getting anywhere," she recalls. "Everybody
kept saying, `Don't worry. Don't worry.'" It was bad advice.
When the infant was 12 days old, his parents rushed him to Children's
Hospital in Cincinnati, Ohio. His breathing was shallow; his
eyes had rolled back. "I was frantic because I could see he
was withering," she recalls. Doctors found the child's weight
had slipped below 5 lbs. Their diagnosis: severe dehydration.
Bradley was starving. A few days later, he suffered a stroke.
Just how much damage it caused remains to be seen.
</p>
<p> Everyone knows that breast-feeding is natural and that doctors
agree it is the best way to feed an infant. It is a less advertised
fact that not every woman--or baby--can do it. "In our attempt
to promote breast-feeding, we have overstated how easy it is,"
says Dr. Marianne Neifert, medical director of the lactation
program at Presbyterian-St. Luke's Medical Center in Denver.
Neifert is an expert on a rare condition called low-milk syndrome,
which occurs when a baby fails, as Bradley did, to get enough
nutrition. Her studies suggest that perhaps 5% of new mothers
fail to produce milk in sufficient quantity. In other instances,
the babies, for a variety of reasons, are unable to nurse successfully.
In either case, the risks are extreme: seizures, strokes and
blood clots that could lead to brain damage or loss of a limb.
</p>
<p> The reason for low milk production, Neifert found, is usually
anatomical. Some women simply lack sufficient glandular tissue
(as opposed to fatty tissue) in their breasts. A history of
breast surgery--biopsies, breast reduction--increases the
risk. (A warning sign of the problem: the breasts do not swell
significantly during early pregnancy.) How does one tell if
a breast-fed baby is getting enough to eat? The proof, say experts,
is in the diaper. In the first few weeks of life, a nursing
baby normally wets at least six diapers a day and has very frequent
bowel movements. For mothers who cannot produce enough milk,
the solution is easy: supplement the baby's diet with infant
formula.
</p>
<p> While low-milk syndrome is not necessarily on the rise, some
doctors believe that they are seeing more severe cases than
in the past because shorter hospital stays for new mothers make
it harder to train them in the techniques of breast-feeding
and harder to identify problems. "We aren't able to intervene
in day two or three of life," says Dr. Michael Farrell, chief
of staff at Cincinnati's Children's Hospital. Most American
women now leave the hospital within 36 hours of giving birth
and don't see a pediatrician until a week later--often too
late to forestall severe dehydration and other problems.
</p>
<p> Prompted in part by reports about low-milk syndrome, the American
Academy of Pediatrics is considering a recommendation that mothers
bring their newborns for a checkup when the babies are just
three or four days old. That might have made all the difference
for Bradley Erwin.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>