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Bubble Trouble
How to Control Baby's Gas
By Carma Haley Shoemaker
Gas pain is uncomfortable. When those bubbles form, the bloating can make even the biggest man double over in pain. So it comes as no surprise that infants with gas pain cry and cry and cry. Parents want nothing more than to comfort their baby. But how? And once the current crisis has passed, what can parents do to prevent it from reoccurring?
"My son, Mike, cried from gas pain almost constantly for eight months," says Margaret Helmstetter of Sierra Vista, Ariz. "I had tried everything to calm and relieve him – walking, patting his back, burping. Nothing helped. I even tried changing my diet, as he was breastfed, and that didn't help either. When I asked the doctor, he told me to do my best and that it would go away."
If none of these suggestions help, Prachniak suggests that it's time to call your doctor. "Not every baby will react to non-medical methods, and it's OK if your baby doesn't," she says. "It may then be time to ask your doctor about trying infant drops that help to break up gas bubbles and relieve pressure in Baby's tummy. They work quickly and will offer the relief that Baby needs."
Helmstetter has gone that route. "When none of the 'mommy methods' helped, I asked my doctor about an over-the-counter to help relieve the gas pain," she says. "I used 'grippe water.' It is an over-the-counter medicine from England that blends licorice and peppermint. It comes in a clear liquid that acts like water but has a nice odor, and babies don't mind the taste. I would give my baby a few drops, Baby would expel the gas with big burps, and [his] tummy – and Baby – would calm down."
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