June 7, 2012
I cannot believe the girls have been with us for two weeks
now! I’m absolutely amazed. I must admit that these last two weeks have
been somewhat of a blur for us. But when
I look back at where we started, I realize we have made HUGE strides in these
two weeks. In fact, I really wanted to
update after one week, but such is the life with twins, I’ve had no time.
When the girls were first born, I was given the opportunity
to begin breastfeeding in the recovery room.
I was so happy when Bria latched on right away. I thought for sure that was the start of our
breastfeeding relationship. When I was moved
to my “real” room, I tried to nurse Nova.
She also latched right on but didn’t do any sucking. We continued to offer the breast to the girls
and sometimes they would latch and other times they wouldn’t. But one thing was a constant, we never had
any sucking or swallowing. Our nurses explained
that preterm babies haven’t had the chance inside the womb to learn how to suck
or swallow. We would now be charged with
that task. We continued to try at the
breast and see if they would get it… When we hit the 6 hour mark, I asked for a
pump and I began my new relationship with the dreaded pump. I began pumping each breast for 20 minutes
every 2-3 hours. It was tedious work to
produce a whopping 1-2cc of colostrum.
After I had the colostrum we would divide it in two. We sucked it up into a syringe and we began
to syringe feed the girls. This was the
most exhaustive and tedius thing I’ve ever had to do. We would put the syringe near their mouth to
see if they would suck… nothing. We
would squirt a little colostrum into their mouth to see if they would swallow…
nothing. How do you teach a 36 week
preemie how to swallow? I was so
confused and was beginning to feel so defeated.
We continued to try and with no luck.
The girls were weighed and both had lost significant amounts of
weight. Nova had lost 8% and Bria had
already lost 12%. There was no time to
mess around anymore. We had to add
formula into the equation. As much as I
really did NOT want to go down the formula road with the girls, I didn’t want
to starve them either. I was so worried
that this decision would be the end of our breastfeeding dreams.
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25 minutes worth of pumping just to get this |
Soon enough, the pediatrician that was on call, showed up
for a visit. Luckily, he had a lot of experience and showed us how to properly
teach them how to learn to suck and swallow.
Once you fill your syringe, you place your pinky inside the girls mouth
and massage their tongue down (they both have a habit of keeping their tongues
at the roof of their mouths, which makes it impossible for them to
swallow). After you get the tongue down,
you put the syringe in the mouth and begin to massage the roof of their mouth
with your pinky. This causes the suck
reflex to start. And sure enough, it
worked. Whenever they would suck, we
would squirt a little milk from the syringe into their mouth and they would
swallow! I couldn’t believe it, they
were swallowing!!! Minor Victory #1.
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The beginning of syringe feeding |
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Syringe feeding taking its toll on this momma |
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Nova working on the syringe |
I continued to pump every 2-3 hours, every time we fed
them. We would start with the colostrum
and then we’d give them formula. Little
by little, their weights were starting to go up! And little by little, my colostrum began to
come in abundance. By day two, my milk
was completely in. Not only was it in,
but it was in with large quantities. And
just like that formula was a thing of the past.
Minor Victory #2.
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WOOT WOOT, the milk is in! |
Once we arrived home, we continued with the syringe feeding
for the first 2 nights. It would take us
just shy of 2 hours to feed both girls this way and then I had to pump
afterwards. So, we would get an hour
break and we’d have to do it all over again.
After those 2 nights, we realized we’d never be able to keep that up and
we needed to switch the girls to bottles.
We made the switch and it cut the feed time in half! Minor Victory # 3.
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Double bottle feeding |
All during this, we continued to work on breastfeeding. Both girls have started latching and actually
nursing. I wish I could say that we have
some regularity to this but we don’t.
The girls are still so sleepy.
They are only awake for about 30 minutes of each day. They also have a hard time maintaining their
body temperature. Because of this, they
are burning more calories and weight loss is a concern. Luckily, we have had 2 weight checks in these
two weeks and it IS going up. However,
it is not going up as quickly as it should.
It’s such a fine line to work on breastfeeding with babies who have
weight and body temperature issues. They
need to sleep. They need to be
warm. In order to feed them, we need to
wake them and undress them. I spoke with
a lactation consultant who specializes in preterm twins and she was very
encouraging. She told me not to give
up. We are meeting tomorrow for her to
help me with the girls. She is creating
a schedule for us that will help us navigate the waters of feeding the twins
with the emphasis to get them breastfeeding as close to 100% as possible. It’s been a long and hard two weeks but I’m determined
to make this work. And if it doesn’t
work, I’ll at least have the peace of mind to know that we did EVERYTHING in
our power to try and breastfeed the girls.
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My first time tandem feeding... |
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Nova under the heater to up her temperature |
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Nova's first bath |
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Bria mid burp |
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Bria in deep thought |
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Bria after her bath |
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Clean babies |
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Welcome home girls! |
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Our welcome home committee |
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our house at feeding time |
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Big brother helping feed his sister |
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Big Brother holding his sisters |
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Daddy sleeping with the girls |
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Sweet little Bria Belle |
Wow. You guys are AMAZING!!!! XOXOXO
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