Coping with Infant Sleep Disorders
Sadly, sleep disorders can plague children as well as adults. There are many types of infant sleep disorders, however a physician is often the only person who can properly diagnose them.
Infants have irregular sleep patterns because of their need to frequently eat. Some sleeping disorders happen because of learned behaviour instead of a legitimate disease. If you change your baby’s environment, you will gently teach them to improve their sleeping habits.
Children often go through periods of having nightmares as they get older. Sleep terrors or night terrors are other forms of sleep disorders. The child usually outgrows these forms of sleep disorders.
A child who stops breathing for short periods of time in their sleep is known as sleep apnea. Sleep apnea are mostly diagnosed in premature babies. In fact, it is a proven fact that a premature baby is more likely to have sleep apnea than a baby that is born at full term.
Usually, you have to rub the baby’s back or nudge them and they will start breathing on their own again. In rare cases, infant CPR is needed to revive the baby. When a parent brings back an infant with sleep apnea, it is usually very scary. The fear of their child stopping breathing in the middle of the night can cause any parent to sit up all night beside the crib.
Before any hospital releases a baby who has been diagnosed with sleep apnea, the parent or parents are required to go through an infant CPR course.
When the baby is released, it is usually with a piece of machinery called an apnea monitor. The baby’s breathing is monitored with electrodes attached to the baby’s chest. The monitor will alert you if it detects abnormal breathing patterns.
You will be alerted by the monitor with a loud high-pitched alarm when the baby’s breathing is too shallow or stops altogether. For anyone who has experienced this sound, especially in the middle of the night, it can be a heart stopping experience. Only sleeping baby’s needs to be attached to this monitor.
Medical personnel will take readings from the monitor to make sure it’s being used correctly and to check for problems. The will give all readings to the child’s pediatrician so that they can monitor your baby. The pediatrician will tell you when the monitor is no longer needed. No decisions will be finalised before the pediatrician has discussed your baby’s progress with you.
Quinton van Oudtshoorn
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