The Adventures of Master Liam

Liam is a good baby. He only cries when he is hungry or his diaper needs changing. The only real “problem” we’ve had is with feeding him, which is an ongoing saga. Shannon and I are both committed to breastfeeding, but Liam is slow to take on that one. We had one good feeding in the hospital, with the help of our favorite lactation consultant (ask us about that one). We were unable to have a good feeding by ourselves, and Liam still got very fussy while attempting to latch.

After coming home, we weren’t seeing much improvement. We would spend 20 minutes trying to get him to breastfeed, then we would give him formula by dropping it onto one of our fingers that was in his mouth. When we had a legendary 2 and half hour feeding, we knew we needed help. At the recommendation of another DeKalb Medical lactation consultant (they don’t do home visits and Shannon was still not ready to move), we called another lactation consultant (Anne Grider) to come to our home.

 Anne was very thorough and good at our job. She worked with us for a while before revealing her initial diagnosis: Liam was tongue-tied! He had a “Simple”, Type 2, case of being tongue-tied, which means that his frenulum (the little piece of membrane that connects the tongue to the base of the mouth) was too short and pulled on his tongue, making it very difficult, if not impossible, for Liam to breastfeed. At Anne’s recommendation, we had a frenectomy performed- a simple procedure where the frenulum is cut after being numbed. Liam was half asleep when Dr. Keith Jackson snipped his frenulum, and he didn’t even flinch! There was hardly any blood and Liam didn’t seem concerned.

Since then, Liam’s breastfeeding abilities have greatly improved as well as his bottle feeding. Shannon’s milk supply is still not enough to keep Liam full, so we are continuing to supplement with formula. Shannon is taking a nasty looking herbal supplement called More Milk Plus. Our feeding sessions are still time consuming, and will continue to be so until Liam is able to breastfeed for all his food or we make the hard decision to stop trying to breastfeed and go with the bottle. We’ve been through a lot and so has Liam, so hopefully Shannon’s milk will come in all the way and feedings will become a thing of ease.

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