At my son's recent appointment his doctor who is "supportive" of breastfeeding noticed that he has dropped from just over the 25th percentile in weight at 7 mos to just over the 10 percentile at 10 mos (he weighs 18 pounds 3 ounces). She was concerned by this and mentioned the "F" word...supplementing with formula. My son had been nursing about 5 times per day in addition to solids twice a day (meat, veggies, fruits, yogurt), a small amount of water and a small snack (rice cookie) per day.
I have since tried to increase his breastfeedings to 5-6 times per day and on the doctors suggestion, tried to increase his solids with 3 meals plus a snack.
My son will be weighed again at his one year appointment and I am worried what will happen if he continues to drop in percentile on the weight chart. Even though I did make it clear that I am not comfortable with FF the doc did mention that she must "intervene" if a baby drops at least two lines on the growth chart.
I should mention that my son has recently become very active. He crawls alot, babbles and says a few words. He also has two older sisters that distract him (sometimes at feeding time). Also, although he does communicate his needs he is not by any means a demanding baby.
I guess I am just wondering if anyone has had a similar experience and what might work to help DS put on a bit more weight![]()


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Breastfed babies ususally slide dramatically in the Chart from about 6months on. Because they get moving! My son went from gaining 14oz a week the first 4.5 months to only gaining about 3.5oz a week. He weighed 17.5lbs at 4.5 months. And at months he only weighed aBOUT 20. He slide 25 percentage points in that time. I don't think it sounds like ANYTHING is wrong. Perhaps you should print out some info about breastfed babies and how it's normal for them to slide in the growth chart due to the beginning to roll over, crawl, and cruise.
1-15-06
and
for Gavin, born with an incomplete cleft lip and incomplete posterior cleft palate
with
due 09/05/2008
First in my family to breastfeed
