Baby

Baby Original offers free advice for expecting parents and supporting family and friends. Main topical sections include pediatrician care, parenting, grandparenting, motherhood fitness and health, and social issues including pets, siblings, and schooling.

Pregnancy to Newborm

From moments of considering to have a baby to the first moments of life your little angel plays their part. Their little red face is all scrunched up, and the sounds that voice from her puckered little mouth are the most precious notes you could ever hope for. You ache any time the nurses take her for tests, and you deny offers from well meaning friends and family who offer to hold her while you get some sleep. All you want to do is be with your new baby, and you’ll forego food, water and sleep to do just that!

Parenting to Grandparenting

Parenting is often a thankless job. It is a difficult job, and a job that keeps parents up at night. From crying babies to whining toddlers, defiant teenagers to aloof young adults, parents constantly struggle to understand and positively affect the lives entrusted them. But in the end, it is a job every parent will say is the most amazing and wonderful adventure imaginable. It is the smiles, first steps, first homeruns, family trips, hugs and kisses that outshine the less appealing aspects of parenthood, and it is for these moments parents gladly lump the rest.

Day Care and Schooling

For many, it starts with the first day of kindergarten. For others, it begins a year or two earlier, with preschool. For all, it is a momentous occasion that marks the beginning of a learner’s journey that will never end. It's late summer, and it school is about to begin!

Eager little kids follow anxious parents through stores, buying back-to-school clothes, backpacks and sneakers. They get fresh haircuts, take extra bubbly baths the night before and are sent to bed extra early to ensure a good night's sleep. The next morning they're off to school. Be it kindergarten, middle school or college, the routine is mostly the same. May be by the time they’re in high school, the bubble bath is out of the question, and they can borrow the car and do their own shopping, and by college, parents can only wonder about that good night’s sleep, but these details are only minor. The first day of school is a blend of excitement, anxiety and curiosity for all students and parents as well.

Checking for Diastasis

Filed under: Health — Baby Original @ 8:07 pm

Checking for Diastasis After delivery, the abdominal muscles are always loose and soft. The abdomen looks and feels like gelatin, which can be quite a shock. It is important to check the linea alba between the rectus muscles for separation, called diastasis. The opening between the muscles may be slight or so large that the uterus or abdominal contents can be felt bulging through the opening.

Since there must be a good balance between back and abdominal muscles, a large diastasis will eventually cause backaches [and possibly radiating leg pain] jut from moving through the normal day’s activities of caring for an infant or managing a full-time job at or away from home. If no corrective attempts are made to close the opening, reestablishing muscle balance and strength, there will be little support for a subsequent pregnancy. Posture will be poor and many aches and pains will develop, all from lack of abdominal strength.

Check for diastasis on the third or fourth day after delivery. Until this time the area will feel too slack for you to get an indication of the state of the abdominals. Also, you will have had a few days worth of abdominal exercises to help improve your strength.

To check:

  1. Lie on your back, with your bent. Place the fingers of one hand on your abdomen covering your navel [your fingers should point toward your pubic bone]. Apply firm pressure…
  2. Inhale deeply. Then exhale slowly and at the same time lift your head and neck slowly. As you lift, you’ll feel each of the rectus muscles tighten and pull toward the center [toward your fingers].
  3. Check to see how many fingers will fit in the gap. One or two finger widths are normal and to be expected, this will gradually decrease with exercise. Three or four finger widths will require special attention from you to repair and rebalance the muscles.
    Don’t hesitate to ask for help from a nurse [preferably a registered nurse] or your physician if you have difficulty checking your abdominals.

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