Guest guest Posted September 19, 2004 Report Share Posted September 19, 2004 > People have suggested to take her off Homo milk and try giving her raw unpasturised goat or cow's milk. Does anyone have any suggestions for me? Some people tolerate raw milk, and/or goat milk, better than cow milk. >>I worry because she cannot live on milk alone. Someone had also suggested sprinkling Peptizyde in her milk but I don't understand why. She is probably not tolerating the casein [milk protein, a common problem] and her body is craving it. By sprinkling Peptizyde in the milk, that will remove most if not all of the intolerance. Therefore, her body will probably at first crave it MORE, but after a few days she will stop craving it and be more open to eating foods. >>I feel like I'm at a loss because she is so sensitive to taste that if I mess with the only thing she's taking in she might stop drinking her milk all together. Just start with a very small sprinkle, see if that helps. Dana Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 19, 2004 Report Share Posted September 19, 2004 My daughter started rejecting foods within a few months of her MMR and it's because the measles affected her eyesite. She also started lining up objects, stacking books and only had a few activities she would do-reading, computer, and tv. I also couldn't take her anyplace new or she just clung to me and sometimes cried. She became very insistent on sameness. She wouldn't play with any new toys until we spent a lot of time playing with them then we would see her venture over to them (we later figured out she had been using her peripheral vision to see what we did with the toy). Unfortunately, we didn't discover she had an eyesite problem until 2 1/2. Wow, the difference glasses have made. If you haven't already, I would highly suggest getter her eyes checked. Best Wishes! Becky > My daughter is 28 months old and I've just been told is autistic. Unfortunately here in Canada you will not receive any help until you get an 'official' diagnosis. I'm on a 9 month waiting list. I am going to seek out a private service, I cannot wait that long. > > My daughter has had problems with eating since birth. We had her on Good Start formula, as it's the only thing that she would keep down, until she turned 13 months and we switched her to Homo milk. We had her eating baby foods and even started mincing chicken into it. She was doing great for a while, then she stopped eating solids all together. I figured it was due to teething. Coincidentally enough this all started 2 months after she had her MMR shot. Slowly I managed to get her to start eating the solids again. Then a month later she stopped again. If I go near her with the food she screams as if it's going to hurt her. Now she will only drink homo milk, munch on sour cream and onion chips, some dry cereal and mini M & M's that I have just recently stopped letting her have. I've noticed lately that her sinus' are stuffed up but she doesn't have a cold. > > People have suggested to take her off Homo milk and try giving her raw unpasturised goat or cow's milk. Does anyone have any suggestions for me? I worry because she cannot live on milk alone. Someone had also suggested sprinkling Peptizyde in her milk but I don't understand why. I feel like I'm at a loss because she is so sensitive to taste that if I mess with the only thing she's taking in she might stop drinking her milk all together. > > Please help. > Desperate Mother > Shauna Piwek > whitelight@s... > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 20, 2004 Report Share Posted September 20, 2004 > Thank you for your reply Dana. That makes a lot ot sense. I will definately get her going on the Peptizyde. Do you think I should still switch her over to Goats milk, or would the Peptizyde do fine in the homo milk? If you would like to still give her cow milk, try using the enzyme with that at first. If you still notice problems, then you can switch to goat milk. >>If I was to switch her to Goats milk would I have to continue putting the Peptizyde in it? Probably yes. But some kids still have problems with cow milk and enzyme, but they don't with goat milk. Most kids with casein intolerance, have problems with both cow and goat, at least at first. Later, as the gut heals, most kids do better with goat than cow. Dana Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 20, 2004 Report Share Posted September 20, 2004 Unfortunately we didn't know any better at her 22 month check-up and gave her the rest of her shots. That was the appointment where we got all the referrals to OT, SLP and school. My dr also believed that thimerosal had also been removed from vaccines back in 2000- 2001. But I'm convinced that my daughter had at least some shots with thimerosal still in them. She won't get any more shots. There are lots of websites and books with information to help you make your decision. I think books by Cave, Neil and any others that come up with these authors on Amazon are probably good ones. Maybe someone can recommend a specific one as I haven't read any. I have lots of websites but don't know off hand if any of them really give the statistics (such as ineffectiveness of boosters, disease rates dropping before vaccines started, etcl) like I've heard some of the books do. I just looked at some of the other responses and I see you're saying you are not giving any more vaccines. If you need some websites that give information on how to divide shots and other times to give them let me know-there are lots of various recommendations. Anyway, I'm not an expert on this! If no one else says anything please ask about the shot you mentioned, PENTA, I think there are some recommendations on supplements to give the child to help the immune system but I'm not familar with which ones. Also, what are the chances of your daughter getting one of the diseases vs getting a behavioral or development problem (this is at 1 in 6!). Best Wishes! You are so lucky to find a group like this so early! Becky > > My daughter is 28 months old and I've just been told is autistic. > Unfortunately here in Canada you will not receive any help until you > get an 'official' diagnosis. I'm on a 9 month waiting list. I am > going to seek out a private service, I cannot wait that long. > > > > My daughter has had problems with eating since birth. We had her on > Good Start formula, as it's the only thing that she would keep down, > until she turned 13 months and we switched her to Homo milk. We had > her eating baby foods and even started mincing chicken into it. She > was doing great for a while, then she stopped eating solids all > together. I figured it was due to teething. Coincidentally enough > this all started 2 months after she had her MMR shot. Slowly I > managed to get her to start eating the solids again. Then a month > later she stopped again. If I go near her with the food she screams > as if it's going to hurt her. Now she will only drink homo milk, > munch on sour cream and onion chips, some dry cereal and mini M & M's > that I have just recently stopped letting her have. I've noticed > lately that her sinus' are stuffed up but she doesn't have a cold. > > > > People have suggested to take her off Homo milk and try giving her > raw unpasturised goat or cow's milk. Does anyone have any suggestions > for me? I worry because she cannot live on milk alone. Someone had > also suggested sprinkling Peptizyde in her milk but I don't > understand why. I feel like I'm at a loss because she is so sensitive > to taste that if I mess with the only thing she's taking in she might > stop drinking her milk all together. > > > > Please help. > > Desperate Mother > > Shauna Piwek > > whitelight@s... > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 23, 2004 Report Share Posted September 23, 2004 I wouldn't put it in the milk, might affect the taste. I'd try a miniscule amount of water with a straw. It minimizes taste. to introduce the straw, I'd have her use the straw while drinking regular milk. Good luck. Need Serious Help > My daughter is 28 months old and I've just been told is autistic. > Unfortunately here in Canada you will not receive any help until you get > an 'official' diagnosis. I'm on a 9 month waiting list. I am going to seek > out a private service, I cannot wait that long. > > My daughter has had problems with eating since birth. We had her on Good > Start formula, as it's the only thing that she would keep down, until she > turned 13 months and we switched her to Homo milk. We had her eating baby > foods and even started mincing chicken into it. She was doing great for a > while, then she stopped eating solids all together. I figured it was due > to teething. Coincidentally enough this all started 2 months after she had > her MMR shot. Slowly I managed to get her to start eating the solids > again. Then a month later she stopped again. If I go near her with the > food she screams as if it's going to hurt her. Now she will only drink > homo milk, munch on sour cream and onion chips, some dry cereal and mini > M & M's that I have just recently stopped letting her have. I've noticed > lately that her sinus' are stuffed up but she doesn't have a cold. > > People have suggested to take her off Homo milk and try giving her raw > unpasturised goat or cow's milk. Does anyone have any suggestions for me? > I worry because she cannot live on milk alone. Someone had also suggested > sprinkling Peptizyde in her milk but I don't understand why. I feel like > I'm at a loss because she is so sensitive to taste that if I mess with the > only thing she's taking in she might stop drinking her milk all together. > > Please help. > Desperate Mother > Shauna Piwek > whitelight@... > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.