Title: Feed That Baby!
1Feed That Baby!
- Kathryn Camp, MS, RD, CSP
- Assistant Professor of Pediatrics
- USUHS
- Pediatric Nutritionist, WRAMC
2Infant Nutrition
- The interplay of meeting nutritional demands and
developmental milestones - 100kcal/kg/day 2.2 g pro/kg/day
- Breastmilk or Iron fortified formulas
3(No Transcript)
4Breastmilk
- Four stages of composition
- Colostrum ?fat and calories ?protein/vit/min
- Transitional milk
- Mature milk
- Extended lactation
- Hindmilk vs foremilk
- Needs of lactating women
- additional 500 calories, 12-15grams of protein
5Breastmilk Composition
- Energy- 20cal/oz, variable within a feeding
- 50 fat, 40 carbohydrate, 10 protein
- Fat
- Palmitic, linoleic, oleic
- EFA--linolenic and linoleic
- Docosahexaenoic and arachidonic acids
- Carbohydrate
- Lactose (glucose galactose)
- Protein
- 70 whey and 30 casein
6(No Transcript)
7Composition cont
- Immunological factors
- anti-inflammatory
- -protect against atopy
- anitmicrobial
- Secretory IgA
- immunomodulating
- cytokines
8AAP Recommendations Breastfeeding
- Exclusive breast feeding during the first 4-6
months - Continuation of breast feeding for the 2nd 6
months as optimum source of nutrition
9What Are the Advantages of Breastfeeding?
10Advantages of Breastfeeding
- INFANT
- Superior nutritional composition
- Immunologic properties
- Decreased immune mediated dz
- Improved cognitive ability
- Protective against childhood obesity
11Advantages Cont
- MOTHER/SOCIETY
- Enhanced maternal-infant bonding
- Reduced risk of ovarian and breast cancer and
osteoporosis - Safest in disaster and poverty settings
- Lower cost (including paraphernalia)
- Increased convenience
12Barriers to Breastfeeding
- Sore nipples and engorgement
- Concern for hyperbilirubinemia
- Maternal fatigue
- Return to work
- Concern for milk supply vs infant needs
- Unnecessary formula supplementation
13(No Transcript)
14Signs of Adequate Breastmilk
- Feeding 8-10 times per day
- Rhythmic suck and audible swallows
- Number of wet diapers
- Number of bowel movements
- Infant behavior
- Weight and physical exam
15Expressed Milk
- Clean hands and equipment
- Safe for 8-10 hrs at room temp
- Up to 8 days in coldest part of refrigerator
- 4-6 months in self-defrosting freezer
- Up to 1 year in deep freezer
- Defrost in refrigerator overnight
- Never microwave or refreeze
16Under What Circumstances Would You Recommend
Using Formula?
17Indications for Use of Infant Formulas
- Maternal conditions
- do not wish to or cannot provide BM
- infection with organisms transmitted in BM
- chemotherapy, certain medications or drugs
- Infant conditions
- inborn errors of metabolism
- failure to gain weight despite breastfeeding
intervention
18QuestionA 2 month old infant is brought to
you with failure to thrive. The mother reports
she is breast-feeding the child every 6 hours but
the child only sucks for 5 minutes before falling
asleep. The mother also reports that she is very
anxious. What will be your advice to
her?Answers follow
19- stop breast-feeding immediately and switch to the
bottle - offer the breast more frequently to build up the
milk supply - encourage the infant to suck longer to empty the
breast - offer the breast first then use a bottle if the
child is still hungry - try and relax when nursing the baby
- offer information on breast-feeding support
groups such as Nursing Mothers Assoc
20Infant Formulas
21Infant Formulas
- Four main categories of formulas
- Standard formula (cows milk)
- Enfamil, Similac
- Soy
- Isomil, Prosobee
- Protein hydrolysates
- Pregestimil, Alimentum, Nutramigen
- Purified amino acid based
- Neocate
22Standard Formulas
- Breastmilk
- 20cal/oz
- Human milk fat
- Lactose
- wheycasein 7030
- Iron 0.3mg/L
- Vitamin D 21 IU/L
- Renal solute load 91
- Enfamil/Similac
- 20cal/oz
- Soy, coconut, sunflower, palm
- Lactose
- 6040, 1882
- Iron 12mg/L
- Vitamin D 405 IU/L
- Renal solute load 130s
23Soy Formulas
- Breastmilk
- 20cal/oz
- Human milk fat
- Lactose
- wheycasein 7030
- Iron 0.3mg/L
- Vitamin D 21IU/L
- Renal solute load 91
- Isomil/Prosobee
- 20cal/oz
- palm olein, soy,coconut,sunflower
- Corn syrup/sucrose
- Proteinsoy isolate and L-methionine
- Iron 12mg/L
- Vitamin D 405 IU/L
- Renal solute load 150s
24Soy Formulas
- Not appropriate for preterm infants/CF
- Aluminum content, risk of osteopenia, growth
concerns - Indications for use
- Milk protein intolerance
- Lactose intolerance (rare)
- Galactosemia
- Vegetarian diet
25Milk Protein Allergy
- Not lactose intolerance!!
- Onset first 4 months of life
- Sxs diarrhea, heme , vomiting, rashes,
respiratory sxs, systemic rxn - Tx- elimination of milk protein until 1-2yrs of
age at which time it is reintroduced - 50-60 infants will also have allergy to soy
26Lactose Intolerance
- Two types of lactose intolerance
- Primary congenital lactase deficiency (RARE)
- Secondary lactase deficiency s/p acute gastritis
- Soy and Lactose free formulas (Lactofree) can be
used short term but there is little justification
27Protein Hydrolysates
- Pregestimil
- 20cal/oz
- MCT, safflower, soy
- Sucrose, corn starch
- Casein Hydrolysate-nonantigenic peptides
- Iron 12mg/L
- Vitamin D 405 IU/L
- Renal solute load 170s
- Breastmilk
- 20cal/oz
- Human milk fat
- Lactose
- 70whey 30casein
- Iron 0.3mg/L
- Vit D 21 IU/L
- Renal solute load 91
28QUESTION
- Which formula should these infants have?
- Infant with galactosemia
- Infant with multiple food allergies
- Healthy term infant
- Infant with decreased pancreatic lipase and bile
salts
29Vitamin and Mineral Needs
- Vitamin K IM x1 for all newborns
- Prevents hemorrhagic disease of the newborn
- Low stores at birth and sterile gut
- Vitamin D supplementation
- Exclusively BF infants at risk
- Fat malabsorption, dark skinned, low exposure to
sunlight - Adequate sunlight
- Dose 400IU/day
30Vitamins Minerals (cont)
- Iron supplementation
- Recommended for BF infants by 4-6mo
- Infant cereal/iron drops
- Fluoride supplementation
- Recommended for those infants gt6months who live
in areas where water supply contains lt0.3ppm of
fluoride - Bottled, well water, or RTF formulas
31Introduction of solids
- Readiness- physical and social factors
- extrusion reflex disappears
- can hold head up, sit independently, and maintain
balance while using hands to reach/grasp - Can show desire for food as well as disinterest
in food or satiety - Doubles BW and weighs at least 13lbs
- Seems hungry after 8-10 BF/day or drinks more
than 32oz of formula/day - Typical age 4-6months
32Progression of Solids
- Need for solids
- Feedings
- 4-6 months-infant rice cereal
- 7 months- strained vegetables/fruits
- 8-10 months- juices and meats
- gt9-10 months- finger foods
33Whole Milk
- NOT BEFORE 12 MONTHS
- Risks of early introduction
- Increased risk of milk protein allergy and GI
bleed secondary to GI immaturity - Development of iron deficiency
- Low stores by 4-6mo
- Low bioavailability of iron in cows milk
- GI blood loss
- Poor source of vitamins C E as well as
essential FA
34(No Transcript)
35QUESTION
- A 5mo infant weighing 6kg consumes 4oz of Similac
q 3 hours during the day to total 6 bottles and
sleeps through the night. No solids. Is this
adequate? - What is the total calorie intake?
- 480 calories/day
- How many kcal/kg?
- 80 kcal/kg
- How many calories does the infant need?
- Around 600