Bloom Lactation Salem

Bloom Lactation Salem Lactation Services offered in office & via telehealth. Salem, OR & neighboring areas PLEASE REVIEW IT CAREFULLY. You have the right to:
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New office 12/15!   280 Court St NE Suite 280 Salem, OR 97301Office is tagged in purple on street parking or use one of ...
12/03/2024

New office 12/15! 280 Court St NE Suite 280 Salem, OR 97301

Office is tagged in purple on street parking or use one of the nearby parking garages (blue markers)

Entrances:

Elevator off of Court St. "Busick Court" written in the tiles
Main entranace (stairs) Commercial St

Ok, Lactation Consultants.  Your turn!  What's your costume?
10/23/2024

Ok, Lactation Consultants. Your turn! What's your costume?

My fun Halloween "quiz"   👻🤡🎃 Scroll through and name your costume!
10/22/2024

My fun Halloween "quiz" 👻🤡🎃 Scroll through and name your costume!

No bottle ni**le is going to be exactly like the breast.  Not shaped exactly like it or have the same resistance of skin...
10/10/2024

No bottle ni**le is going to be exactly like the breast. Not shaped exactly like it or have the same resistance of skin and tissue or anything else. We are just trying to get close.

So many ni**les are long and stiff (hello! gag response) or have such wide bases with narrow tips that baby is basically trying to suckle on a straw.

Not for all babies (everyone has different anatomy and ability to manage different flow rates) but for those who are full term with normal function and anatomy, the generally accepted recommendation is for a gradual transition from tip to base ... kinda like this picture which shows a human breast/ni**le in baby's mouth.

Ni***es which are narrow give the tongue only a little to compress and often compensate with way faster flows which is stressful for baby to manage the coordination of suck-swallow-breathe. Ni***es that are super narrow with wide bases don't allow baby to get to the base and the lips struggle to form a seal (milk leaking, smacking, air swallowing) and again these bottles often compensate with a faster, more stressful flow.

What's right for an individual baby will vary, but this is a good place to start.

08/24/2024

Just to add onto the conversation about the AAP's statement that frenotomy procedures are skyrocketing...their study shows about 75,000 frenotomies in 2015. That year there were 3,978,497 people born that year and I know math isn't my strong suit but that's 1.8% of all babies having this procedure.

Some of the more conservative estimates of ankyloglossia state 8% of babies are born with tongue tie (other say 12% or even higher have tongue restriction) and some research says that about 50% of those need surgical intervention.

So what the numbers actually tell us is we are doing frenotomies on fewer than half of all babies who need them.

Oh, lawdy.  We are talking about it again.  Geez. Another article from The NY Times. Who there has ants in their pants a...
08/24/2024

Oh, lawdy. We are talking about it again.

Geez. Another article from The NY Times. Who there has ants in their pants about ankyloglossia or maybe a deep and lingering childhood fear of dentists?

So we are going to do it *again*. We are going to talk about “tongue tie” in the context of infant feeding challenges.

Let’s start with the AAP statement the Times was referencing. Did you read it? It sounds kind of whiny, like this group of pediatricians are upset they have been left out of the diagnosis and treatment loop. They cite significant increases in surgery to release tongue tie over the last several years but you know what else we also see during that time? Yup, significantly increased rates of breastfeeding initiation and duration.

The article mentions that other, more conservative methods should be addressed before surgical release and I absolutely agree. They don’t however have any steps in their algorithm which mention a referral to board-certified Lactation Consultants. How do you assess a functional diagnosis without observing a feed, making interventions, observing the outcome and repeating until you have ruled out that positional changes and the use of feeding tools does not correct the issue? How do you rule out torticollis, TMJ dysfunction, swallowing problems, and more without watching the baby complete a feeding to see how they function in the context of feeding?

It's a process. Observe, intervention, observe, care plan, follow up. Repeat as needed.

Tongue restriction and feeding challenges can have multiple causes. It’s true that I do see a lot of tied babies and that’s because in my area, we have a strong breastfeeding culture and our nurses are great at teaching most parents basic positions and correcting latch problems not caused by anatomic or physiological restrictions. By the time parents come to me, it's often well beyond the basics of latch and positioning.

However, sometimes tongue restriction may be caused by a “tongue tie” which is a short or fibrous frenulum under the tongue which impedes function or baby may have a normal stretchy frenulum, but also have structural muscle tension making the frenulum seem more restrictive than it is. Some tongue restrictions may be resolved by releasing the tight muscles and tissue surrounding the tongue. You have to be highly and skilled and knowledgeable to know the difference.
When baby has this muscle tension, it can look and even feel like a “tongue tie”. Where I work, we offer the in-office procedure (frenotomy) with topical pain medication and our doctors do great releases. And while frenotomy is safe and effective, it's best to address any muscle and tissue tension before a formal diagnosis of tongue tie (or ankyloglossia as it's called medically) is made and definitely before any surgical procedures.

There are exercises to help move the tongue better, to correct the supporting structures of the mouth like cheeks and lips, and movements or gentle stretching to help baby unwind from the constraint of birth.

There are also referrals for manual therapy (which can include pediatric chiropractic, CST, PT, etc) these may be a good option for baby both before a frenotomy and in some cases these techniques may improve help improve feeding enough to make it comfortable for the parent and effective for baby. In this case, the frenulum tension is caused by the surrounding muscles and we don’t do a procedure. We set a plan for follow up and continue to check in on these families over time.

However, these strategies may not be enough to fully resolve the functional problem caused by truly tight and fibrous lingual frena. In that case, baby may need a frenotomy. I’m super lucky to work pediatricians who respect me professionally and trust my evaluations. They respect my expertise and ability to manage feeding plans for their patients.

I’m really, really lucky. I’ve not always been so lucky to be trusted and respected.

In the past, I’ve worked with pediatricians who were skeptics even though day after day, month after month, and year after year their patients had improvements to feeding and great outcomes when I recommended the above interventions. I guess you just can’t change some people’s minds.

The one-sided article from NYT expresses all the hesitancy and skepticism of the AAP’s statement in regards to the necessity and safety of frenotomy also fails to offer any sort of balanced approach by citing any of the dozens upon dozens of research articles which show improvement to infant feeding and parent comfort with frenotomy and certainly doesn’t cite any of the articles which show that conditions like infant regurgitation improve through the reduction of aerophagia when baby can use the major muscles of feeding to swallow properly. I didn’t see any interviews with infant feeding experts, IBCLCs or pediatric SLPs, to ask about our clinical experience or approach either. That type of nuance seems to be missing from The Times fearmongering, unbalanced coverage of this topic. Again, who there has personal vendetta against frenotomy and why?
Do I jump straight into frenotomy for all my patients? No. I’m very demure…very mindful (this post isn’t going to age well but I’m happy to be on trend, for once). We address all the basics and rule out other causes for baby’s feeding issues first.

Do I recommend frenotomy pretty quickly for some patients, yep.

Sometimes, it’s very clear that baby has a super restricted tongue from a tight, fibrous frenulum but that tension hasn’t had time to do its dirty work and create other problems and baby doesn’t have other issues contributing to their feeding problem. I see this most often with my second and more times parents who are going through this process again and have tried all the conservative management they used with their first baby.

At that point, we go through risks: all procedures can involve pain, bleeding, the risk of infection (never even heard of this occurring) or damage to surrounding areas (not with the providers I refer to). Serious risks with this procedure are very low and the release provider should minimize these risks by using pain relief, reviewing baby's full medical history, doing the minimum required for full release of anatomical structures, and using the safest tools and techniques possible (this can include a CO2 laser. I promise it’s not shooting around the room wildly like a 1980s space movie. The CO2 laser is a precise tool and it’s more important to choose whose hands the tool is in than if it’s laser or scissors).

In addition to risks, we have a full consent conversation to discuss potential benefits and have a conversation about a realistic timeline for improvement. The goal of the procedure is to release the tongue to have normal mobility which improves feeding function over time and to reduce any symptoms which are a result of compensatory behaviors of the tongue not moving correctly that parents report and we observe in baby. The improvements often take time to notice though many people notice a difference in the quality and comfort of baby's latch immediately.

We discuss the necessity of aftercare to allow for proper healing. “Stretches” (as the active wound care is often called) are needed to maintain the surgical opening and prevent reattachment. This care should be gentle and quick – the goal is just to maintain the opening created with the frenotomy with as little infant distress as possible. Post-frenotomy wound care instruction varies from provider to provider. There is not a standard of care and much of our instruction is developed from experience, observation, and what we know about oral wound healing. The point of a frenotomy is to release the tongue from the floor of the mouth so this type of wound should be actively managed to heal open which allows for correct healing and better function.

When frenotomy is needed, I refer to the pediatricians at my office and very skilled and experienced ENTs in my community. With our internal referrals, the providers I work with trust me to educate parents regarding wound care and we have developed evolving guidelines and recommendations. If parents see the ENT, they are instructed to follow the aftercare provided by that doctor.

The process of treating ankyloglossia has 3 major steps: pre-release preparation, a full release with good aftercare, and post-release therapy for functionality.

Perhaps the authors of the AAP statement don't follow this process and refer to an IBCLC to assess and intervene to get the best outcomes. I could see how that would result in poorer outcomes and skepticism.

How often do I see reattachment? In the last year, I’ve seen a handful. The majority of those did not follow up with me, as recommended, and at least one did not follow my recommendations for pre-release preparation. This is why we discuss in full the entire process and I share a timeline of expected outcomes and needed steps for full resolution. I want parents to be informed, prepared, and empowered to make their decision.

I do a lot more than just refer for frenotomy though. An IBCLC should be managing the feeding plan to meet parents’ goals and create a plan to maintain milk production, protect mental health, should be able to instruct families and how to use supplement tools like bottles, manage maternal conditions and concerns, and do all this within the means and resources of the family.

I also work in a community which is full of some pretty amazing and knowledgeable IBCLCs. I know this is not the case in every community and resources for parents are rare and inaccessible. This is another issue which the AAP statement does not address. How can parents find and afford to see an IBCLC to rule out differential causes for feeding problems or to carry a family through the entire process of release if we are not employed in the outpatient setting? Again, I’m very lucky because I work at an organization who recognized that need and filled it for their patients. We have several offices across the metro area and every single one has at least a part time IBCLC. Patients can almost always get a same day appointment if they can travel to one of our sites.

Perhaps instead of the AAP making a statement that frenotomy is overdone and ankyloglossia is over diagnosed, they could seek to solve the problem by hiring - or at least referring - to highly skilled and knowledgeable IBCLCs. They could form professional relationships with specialized care providers and bridge the gap of care that their patients so desperately need.

Geez. Another article from The NY Times. Who there has ants in their pants about ankyloglossia or maybe a deep and lingering childhood fear of dentists?So we are going to do it again. We are going to talk about “tongue tie” in the context of infant feeding challenges. Let’s start with the AAP ...

How accurate are the marked volumes on bottles?  And does this matter?Given one of the bottles in my at-home super duper...
08/09/2024

How accurate are the marked volumes on bottles? And does this matter?

Given one of the bottles in my at-home super duper unofficial experiment, let's suppose baby's provider recommends the top end of supplementation of about 30 oz per 24 hrs.

That's 900 mL. Using the deviation I found at 100 mL in my experiment, this resulted in about a 15% difference which if the marks on the bottle were used would result in feeding 1035 mL

To break down the calories (at the standard 22 kcal/oz for human milk) that would be 660 vs 759.

Does it matter?

It sure does in terms of exclusivity of feeding human milk and the potential need to supplement with formula. This would also affect regurgitation as the risks of regurgitation increase when fed above 120 mL.

I only tried the 4 bottles I had easily at hand, in Gribble et al's research they found deviation both above and below which would have huge implications for slow gaining babies which could result in formula supplementation, increased chances of calorie fortification (which carries it's own risks), and not to mention parent stress!

08/03/2024
07/30/2024
07/23/2024

Did you know I can bill your insurance for prenatal education and postpartum consults?

Moda
Regence, BCBS
Pacific Source
Pacific Source Community Solutions
United Health Care/UMR (PPO, EPO, HMO)
Aetna/Meritain (PPO, POS, OAP, Select)
Tricare West
Cigna (PPO, POS, OAP, EPO)

Some plans require a benefits check and verification which takes 2-3 business days so book in advance!

Coming soon!
07/06/2024

Coming soon!

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Salem, OR
97301

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