Guest guest Posted February 27, 2003 Report Share Posted February 27, 2003 I took Matt to see a pediatric gastroenterologist last night. I had a bunch of information copied about RSS and Matt's whole history, and I left it at home. He has heard of RSS, but not familiar with it. After listening to me ramble on and on about our feeding problems and Matt's probable reflux he wants to try several things. I am wondering if any of you have experience with these... 1. He wants to test him for parasites, a stool sample, no big deal 2. He wants to test Matt for H.Pylori, which is the bacteria that causes ulcers, and can cause reflux. Not a huge deal, but it is a low acid diet and a breathe test in two weeks. I am ok with that. 3. Then he started to explain to me that I had to stop forcing Matt to eat. I should just put the food in front of him, give him 30 minutes and walk away. If he doesn't eat everything, he gets nothing until the next meal. I tried to explain to him that Matt won't care, he won't eat and he will be thrilled with this arrangement. I have had many people over the years tell me " kids will eat when they are hungry " , but I am telling you, Mine won't. Plus, his behavior suffers since his blood sugar is low and then he'll be at school where all heck will break lose. I told him last night I wouldn't do that until we got these other tests back. My plan is to take all this information to his office. I am NOT going to do the " 30 minutes to eat or else " until we know for sure if Matt is RSS Or not. I guess my question for those of you with older, diagnosed RSS children, do you give them time limits? I literally tell Matt, " Take a bite " , " chew " , " swallow " ...he would (and has) sit there for hours with one bite in his mouth! AAAAAAAAAAAAgghgh.. I am so frustrated. I used to think this whole eating thing was a behavior problem that needed to be " kept on top of " , now I am convinced he has no hunger, no oral needs (bottle broke himself at 8 months - refused it, no pacifier, no thumb). But I still need him to eat! Ok, sorry to vent. You are all more experienced at this than me, so I guess I am looking for advice to keep myself from crying my eyes out! Seems like all I do is force him to eat, clean up, give him a snack and then it is time for another meal.... Beth Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 27, 2003 Report Share Posted February 27, 2003 Hi, I'm not sure how old Matt is, but with age 3 that would never work. What we do with is: 1. turn on a video - when distracted, he doesn't notice that he is eating. 2. start with " real food " (something he has to chew) 3. when he stops eating and won't start again, I move to spoon food - ie yogurt, pudding, applesauce, jello I will keep in his hight chair until I am sure that he will not eat another bite. I try to put on a dinner video that lasts at least 45 minutes (if the video ends sooner, he will just insist on getting up sooner). If that was me, I would look for another ped GI. It is obvious that he doesn't understand that (some) RSS children just do not experience hunger. What is worse, skipping a meal is dangerous for RSS children who can go hypo-g. Good luck, Judith, Steve, (RSS) and (non RSS) 3 year old twins Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 27, 2003 Report Share Posted February 27, 2003 Beth, I agree with the other suggestions people already made. I have one of those 'older' RSS children. She also happens to have a g-tube and take periactin. We tried a 5 day experiment this summer doing what your doctor suggested. It had to be stopped on day 3 because she consumed so little ....roughly 350 calories a day. The most revealing thing of all was the second dinner. I got a phone call right at the start of dinner and I walked away. When I returned, I told her dinner was over. She said " Mommy, I forgot to eat " After two days of barely eating, she still wasn't getting normal hunger signals. For her, she eats because of my expectation and her desire to please me. She is definitely not eating because her body requests it. I know it is hard for others to get this. I still have a hard time believing it myself! I would trust your instincts with that one. And, you are not alone on the 'chew', 'swallow', 'take another bite' thing. Isn't it tedious? I do think that has improved in the past year for us. But, I still have to cue her on 'take another bite'. Hang in there, Irene Mom to 6 year old > I took Matt to see a pediatric gastroenterologist last night. I had > a bunch of information copied about RSS and Matt's whole history, > and I left it at home. He has heard of RSS, but not familiar with > it. After listening to me ramble on and on about our feeding > problems and Matt's probable reflux he wants to try several things. > I am wondering if any of you have experience with these... > > 1. He wants to test him for parasites, a stool sample, no big deal > > 2. He wants to test Matt for H.Pylori, which is the bacteria that > causes ulcers, and can cause reflux. Not a huge deal, but it is a > low acid diet and a breathe test in two weeks. I am ok with that. > > 3. Then he started to explain to me that I had to stop forcing Matt > to eat. I should just put the food in front of him, give him 30 > minutes and walk away. If he doesn't eat everything, he gets > nothing until the next meal. I tried to explain to him that Matt > won't care, he won't eat and he will be thrilled with this > arrangement. I have had many people over the years tell me " kids > will eat when they are hungry " , but I am telling you, Mine won't. > Plus, his behavior suffers since his blood sugar is low and then > he'll be at school where all heck will break lose. I told him last > night I wouldn't do that until we got these other tests back. My > plan is to take all this information to his office. I am NOT going > to do the " 30 minutes to eat or else " until we know for sure if Matt > is RSS Or not. > > I guess my question for those of you with older, diagnosed RSS > children, do you give them time limits? I literally tell > Matt, " Take a bite " , " chew " , " swallow " ...he would (and has) sit > there for hours with one bite in his mouth! > > AAAAAAAAAAAAgghgh.. I am so frustrated. I used to think this whole > eating thing was a behavior problem that needed to be " kept on top > of " , now I am convinced he has no hunger, no oral needs (bottle > broke himself at 8 months - refused it, no pacifier, no thumb). But > I still need him to eat! > > Ok, sorry to vent. You are all more experienced at this than me, so > I guess I am looking for advice to keep myself from crying my eyes > out! Seems like all I do is force him to eat, clean up, give him a > snack and then it is time for another meal.... > > Beth Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 1, 2003 Report Share Posted March 1, 2003 Hi Beth, Just to add a little bit to the replies you've already gotten - yes, " chew, swallow, take another bite " happens at nearly every mealtime and is very tedious and frustrating! Most of the time, I just deal with it and get on with things, though some days I want to scream and/or cry - and sometimes do. Another bad effect is that eating has become a hot button with my other two children who are perfectly healthy weight-wise - if they start getting picky or won't eat something I serve, I can feel the knots in my stomach tightening and have to remind myself that all kids are like this and not to worry. But I know it'll get better. I hope Tyler responds to GHT like - I can't wait for Tyler to develop a natural hunger! Two things to add to the list of ways to make it easier: (1) Every 2nd or 3rd bite is a food that he loves - usually fruit or vegetables. If he knows he's getting a piece of orange or grape or mushroom next, it really speeds up the time it takes him to chew and swallow the higher-calorie foods. (2) When he was younger, we used the video distraction method. However, around age 3 1/2 this stopped working so well b/c he'd zone in on the TV and stop chewing. So we play music and try to have fun and talk during meals. - Tyler's mom Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 1, 2003 Report Share Posted March 1, 2003 , Thanks! I am thankful to everyone on this board for my sanity. Matt has started to do " homework " , dot to dots, word finds, etc while eating his breakfast. It keeps him distracted and kind of " preps " him for working at school. If I can get him distracted he will just eat and swallow as I prompt him, if not he gets angry and starts resisting! Beth > Hi Beth, > > Just to add a little bit to the replies you've already gotten - > yes, " chew, swallow, take another bite " happens at nearly every > mealtime and is very tedious and frustrating! > > Most of the time, I just deal with it and get on with things, though > some days I want to scream and/or cry - and sometimes do. Another > bad effect is that eating has become a hot button with my other two > children who are perfectly healthy weight-wise - if they start > getting picky or won't eat something I serve, I can feel the knots in > my stomach tightening and have to remind myself that all kids are > like this and not to worry. But I know it'll get better. I hope > Tyler responds to GHT like - I can't wait for Tyler to > develop a natural hunger! > > Two things to add to the list of ways to make it easier: > > (1) Every 2nd or 3rd bite is a food that he loves - usually fruit or > vegetables. If he knows he's getting a piece of orange or grape or > mushroom next, it really speeds up the time it takes him to chew and > swallow the higher-calorie foods. > > (2) When he was younger, we used the video distraction method. > However, around age 3 1/2 this stopped working so well b/c he'd zone > in on the TV and stop chewing. So we play music and try to have fun > and talk during meals. > > - Tyler's mom Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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