Guest guest Posted November 29, 2002 Report Share Posted November 29, 2002 Hi , First, I want to tell you that I went to your web site and you photographs are wonderful. I loved seeing Ashton's earliest pictures, but my gosh he was so teeny. How much did he weigh at birth? Did you know before he was born that he had CF, or did you find out at birth? Second, about the decongestants and cough suppressants. Some decongestants may be drying, but this is more of an action of an antihistamine. My son wasn't diagnosed with CF until age 4. But before the CF diagnosis, we knew he had allergies (he took weekly allergy shots). His pediatrician gave us the name of a good over-the-counter liquid cold medicine and we used it every night. Without it, often about 20 minutes after falling asleep, he'd begin coughing until he'd finally vomit. During the worst times, we used a prescription cough med called Tussinex. The day was diagnosed with CF, I asked his pulmonary doctor whether it was okay to continue using the liquid cold medicine (it contained a decongestant and antihistamine). He said yes. I was so relieved because I knew wouldn't be able to sleep peacefully without it. He also said the cough suppressant was okay. I remember this like it was yesterday. He said there will always come a time when you just have to use a cough suppressant especially if the cough is preventing sleep. We all know that coughing is good because it clears the lungs of mucus, so of course you never use it on a daily basis. I think you followed maternal instinct and did the right thing. Because your son has a dilated esophogeal sphincter coughing is going aggravate it. His body is already burning extra calories trying to get over the cold and burning calories from coughing, so you don't want those calories being thrown up. Since the PediaCare has an expectorant, this is going to thin the mucus, but it can't work properly without lots of liquids. You're already probably giving him extra liquids because of the cold, but I just wanted to point out the expectorant needs liquids to work. Do you run a cool-mist vaporizer in his room to help with the stuffy nose? This can help a lot, just be sure to clean it well every day to keep down mold. You might want to put a drop of eucalyptus essential oil in the water -- but check the machine's directions first because some tell you not to add anything but water, and I'd hate for you to ruin your machine. Eucalyptus helps open stuffy noses; it's a good antibacterial and anti-inflammatory agent. My son and I keep a bottle of eucalyptus oil on hand to use at the first sign of a cold or stuffy sinuses. In fact, I put a drop in a pan of water and set the pan on my radiators to moisten the air in my home. If you have a Whole Foods store near you, you can pick up a bottle of eucalyptus there. In fact, the Aura Cacia brand is on sale right now because I was just at Whole Foods on Wednesday and noticed it when I bought a bottle of clove oil. Also, I'm a HUGE fan of vitamin C. I've been giving vitamin C to my kids since they were very young. We take 500 mg. twice and day and rarely get colds but when we do, we bump the dose to a minimum of 3,000 mg. daily, and suck on a zinc tablet for 20 minutes. The zinc kills the rhinovirus in the back of your throat. They make grape flavored zinc/echinacea lollipops for kids. My daughter's boyfriend bought some for her last year because she hates sucking zinc tablets (and she's also the one who gets more colds because she hate taking meds of any kind, so she often forgets her daily vitamin C). Echinacea helps boost the immune system so you don't want to use it longterm (3 months is considered long-term), but when you get a cold it's fine to use for a couple weaks until your health returns. Kim Mom to (23 with asthma and cf) and (20 asthma no cf) > Hello all--my 20 month old is having his 2nd cold of his lifetime > and he is starting a cough. It isn't in his lungs (yet), just in > the back of his throat. But he coughs so much since it is gagging > him that he is throwing up in his sleep. I know that we aren't > supposed to give cough suppressants but he keeps throwing up all his > feedings (he is exclusively g-tube fed). So we started giving him > PediaCare with a suppressant, decongestant and expectorant. Is this > OK to give? He has NO lung problems as of yet--we don't even do CPT > anymore. We just want him to dry up this congestion and stop > coughing so he can keep his food down. Please HELP!! > > (mom to Ashton, 20 months wcf, ulcerative collitis, dilated > esophogeal sphincter, g-tube, 11 weeks premature) > > http://www.babyfergie.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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