Why babies can’t drink water when you are breast-feeding you?

From when an infant can (or should) be drinking water? The administration of a large amount of water to a baby under the age of six months, it can affect the body’s ability …
to absorb the nutrients of the parent or of the foreign milk. It can also cause the feeling of satiety and affect the appetite for milk.
When a baby under six months of drinking too much water can cause poisoning. The rare condition known as water intoxication can cause seizures to coma. This is what happens when rather than too much water dilutes the concentration of sodium in the body, disrupting the electrolyte balance and causing swelling at tissues. Adding extra water to the formula milk your baby not only increases the risk of poisoning, but it significantly reduced the necessary nutrients you need to get your baby. Carefully follow the preparation instructions, meal of your baby when you mix milk powder or condensed milk, and don’t try to save on the amount of dust by adding more water than recommended.
And when the baby is sick?
When your baby is sick you may need water, especially when she has a fever or gastroenteritis. Contact the pediatrician you, and he will help you determine how much water is needed in these cases.
Is the water dangerous for infants?
Research specific to the paediatric hospital at the university of John Hopkins in the USA showed that even a little water to infants under six months can be life-threatening, risk to be affected by poisoning.
“The babies are from very small have the feeling of thirst,” says dr. Jennifer Anders.
However, all you can drink babies of such age is breast milk or milk powder. This is because the kidneys of infants is mature enough to manage quantities of water, and as a result, if you drink water, the body removes sodium from the body, with the excess water. This can affect the functioning of the brain. Symptoms that indicate the possibility of poisoning from water is the flushing, drowsiness, hypothermia, and possibly fainting.
Experts say that the milk drinking babies under six months should not be very dilute -that is, to have a lot of water – while you need to avoid and the “pediatric” drinks containing electrolytes.
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