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Calm a Crying Baby
Newborn Health

Gas Pains and Babies

Tips on How to Control Baby's Gas

Controlling Baby's GasGas 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?

The Painful Truth
A baby's cries, movements and actions are their ways of communicating. It's up to parents to decipher what their baby is saying. "Tummy gas is very common in infants, affecting more than half of all newborns within the first two months of life," says Gale Prachniak, a lactation consultant from Women's and Infant's Hospital in Rhode Island. "Gas bubbles can often cause discomfort, leading to crankiness and crying. There are a couple [signs] that a baby is suffering from gas. These include pulling their legs up toward their body or lying in a curled position in an effort to relieve the discomfort. While the condition of gas may not be extreme at this time, this is a sign for Mom and Dad to take notice, so it doesn't get to that point."

It's up to parents to decipher what their baby is saying.

"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."

The Battle Rages
According to Prachniak, a parent has several options before calling their doctor or using medical intervention. "Mom and Dad are Baby's best chance for gas relief," she says. "First of all, try applying a light pressure on Baby's tummy to soothe and help release the gas. Another option is to carry Baby in the football hold – face down on your forearm, with her legs straddling your elbow and her chin in your hand. This will help bring the gas bubbles up and make them easier to expel by patting her back. Mom or Dad can also place Baby belly down over the knees and gently bounce the legs."


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Anonymous says
October 3, 2009

My daughter is 24 days old, she has been crying because she has gas. So I read these articles and performed them and then she burped so thank you for this website and God B;ess.

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