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Breastfeeding and Jaundice
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Introduction
Jaundice
is due to a buildup in the blood of bilirubin, a yellow pigment that
comes from the breakdown of old red blood cells. It is normal
for old red blood cells to break down, but the bilirubin formed does
not usually cause jaundice because the liver metabolizes it and gets
rid of it into the gut. The newborn baby, however, often becomes
jaundiced during the first few days because the liver enzyme that metabolizes
bilirubin is relatively immature. Furthermore, newborn babies
have more red blood cells than adults, and thus more are breaking down
at any one time. If the baby is premature, or stressed from
a difficult birth, or the infant of a diabetic mother, or more than
the usual number of red blood cells are breaking down (as can happen
in blood incompatibility), the level of bilirubin in the blood may
rise higher than usual levels.
Two types of jaundice
The
liver changes bilirubin so that it can be eliminated from the body
(the changed bilirubin is now called conjugated, direct
reacting, or water soluble bilirubin--all three terms
mean essentially the same thing). If, however, the liver is
functioning poorly, as occurs during some infections, or the tubes
that transport the bilirubin to the gut are blocked, this changed bilirubin
may accumulate in the blood and also cause jaundice. When this
occurs, the changed bilirubin appears in the urine and turns
the urine brown. This brown urine is an important clue
that the jaundice is not "ordinary". Jaundice due
to conjugated bilirubin is always abnormal, frequently serious and
needs to be investigated thoroughly and immediately. Except
in the case of a few extremely rare metabolic diseases,
breastfeeding can and should continue.
Accumulation
of bilirubin before it has been changed by the enzyme of the liver
may be normal—"physiologic jaundice" (this bilirubin
is called unconjugated, indirect reacting or fat soluble bilirubin). Physiologic
jaundice begins about the second day of the baby's life, peaks on the
third or fourth day and then begins to disappear. However, there
may be other conditions that may require treatment that can cause an
exaggeration of this type of jaundice. Because these conditions
have no association with breastfeeding, breastfeeding should continue. If,
for example, the baby has severe jaundice due to rapid breakdown of
red blood cells, this is not a reason to take the baby off the breast. Breastfeeding
should continue in such a circumstance.
So called breastmilk jaundice
There
is a condition commonly called breastmilk jaundice. No one knows
what the cause of breastmilk jaundice is. In order to make this
diagnosis, the baby should be at least a week old, though interestingly,
many of the babies with breastmilk jaundice also have had exaggerated
physiologic jaundice. The baby should be gaining well, with
breastfeeding alone, having lots of bowel movements, passing plentiful,
clear urine and be generally well (handout #4
Is My Baby Getting
Enough Milk?). In such a setting, the baby has what some
call breastmilk jaundice, though, on occasion, infections of the urine
or an under functioning of the baby's thyroid gland, as well as a few
other even rarer illnesses may cause the same picture. Breastmilk
jaundice peaks at 10-21 days, but may last for two or three months. Breastmilk
jaundice is normal. Rarely, if ever,
does breastfeeding need to be discontinued even for a short time. Only
very occasionally is any treatment, such as phototherapy, necessary. There
is not one bit of evidence that this jaundice causes any problem at
all for the baby. Breastfeeding should not be discontinued "in
order to make a diagnosis". If the baby is truly doing well on
breast only, there is no reason, none, to
stop breastfeeding or supplement with a lactation aid, for that matter. The
notion that there is something wrong with the baby being jaundiced
comes from the assumption that the formula feeding baby is the standard
by which we should determine how the breastfed baby should be. This
manner of thinking, almost universal amongst health professionals,
truly turns logic upside down. Thus, the formula feeding baby
is rarely jaundiced after the first week of life, and when he is, there
is usually something wrong. Therefore, the baby with so called
breastmilk jaundice is a concern and "something must be done". However,
in our experience, most exclusively breastfed
babies who are perfectly healthy and gaining weight well are still
jaundiced at five to six weeks of life and even later. The question,
in fact, should be whether or not it is normal not to be jaundiced and
is this absence of jaundice something we should worry about? Do
not stop breastfeeding for “breastmilk” jaundice.
Not-enough-breastmilk Jaundice
Higher
than usual levels of bilirubin or longer than usual jaundice may occur
because the baby is not getting enough milk. This may
be due to the fact that the mother's milk takes longer than average
to "come in" (but if the baby feeds well in the first few
days this should not be a problem), or because hospital routines limit
breastfeeding or because, most likely, the baby is poorly latched on
and thus not getting the milk which is available (handout #4
Is
My Baby Getting Enough Milk?). When the baby is getting little
milk, bowel movements tend to be scanty and infrequent so that the
bilirubin that was in the baby's gut gets reabsorbed into the blood
instead of leaving the body with the bowel movements. Obviously,
the best way to avoid "not-enough-breastmilk jaundice" is
to get breastfeeding started properly (handout #1
Breastfeeding—Starting
Out Right).
Definitely, however, the first approach to
not-enough-breastmilk jaundice is not to take the
baby off the breast or to give bottles (see Handout B: Protocol
to Increase Breastmilk Intake by the Baby). If the baby
is nursing well, more frequent feedings may be enough to bring the
bilirubin down more quickly, though, in fact, nothing needs be done. If
the baby is nursing poorly, helping the baby latch on better may allow
him to nurse more effectively and thus receive more milk. Compressing
the breast to get more milk into the baby may help (handout #15 Breast
Compression). If latching and breast compression alone
do not work, a lactation aid would be appropriate to supplement feedings
(handout #5 Using a Lactation Aid). See also the handout: Protocol
to Increase Breastmilk Intake by the Baby . See also the
website
www.thebirthden.com/Newman.html for videos to help use
the Protocol by showing how to latch a baby on, how to know the baby
is getting milk, how to use compression, as well as other information
on breastfeeding.
Phototherapy (bilirubin lights)
Phototherapy
increases the fluid requirements of the baby. If the baby is
nursing well, more frequent feeding can usually make up this increased
requirement. However, if it is felt that the baby needs more
fluids, use a lactation aid to supplement, preferably
expressed breastmilk, expressed milk with sugar water or sugar water
alone rather than formula.
Questions? (416) 813-5757 (option 3) or drjacknewman@sympatico.ca or
my book Dr. Jack Newman’s Guide to Breastfeeding ( called The
Ultimate Breastfeeding Book of Answers in the USA)
Handout #7. Jaundice Revised
January 2005
Written by Jack Newman, MD, FRCPC. © 2005
This handout may be copied and distributed without further permission, on the condition that it is not
used in any context in which the WHO code on the marketing of breastmilk substitutes is violated.
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