144 lines
6.8 KiB
XML
144 lines
6.8 KiB
XML
import Article from "@/components/Article";
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import { Metadata } from "next";
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export const metadata: Metadata = {
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title: "Article - Treatment for the Newborn | Dr. Feely",
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authors: [{ name: "Richard A. Feely, D.O., FAAO, FCA, FAAMA" }],
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description: `For centuries, in many parts of the world, highly trained birth
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attendants have seen it as part of their job to correct the stresses that
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birth has placed in the body of the newborn. This constitutes an
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acknowledgment that birth is a difficult process and that measures can be
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taken after birth to assist the baby in its recovery.`,
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};
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const ArticlePediatricTreatmentForNewborns = () => {
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return (
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<Article
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title="Treatment for the Newborn"
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author="Richard A. Feely, D.O., FAAO, FCA, FAAMA"
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>
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<p>
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For centuries, in many parts of the world, highly trained birth
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attendants have seen it as part of their job to correct the stresses
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that birth has placed in the body of the newborn. This constitutes an
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acknowledgment that birth is a difficult process and that measures can
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be taken after birth to assist the baby in its recovery.
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</p>
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<p>
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In industrialized nations of Northern Europe and North America, birth
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has been seen as an event that either leaves no negative impact upon the
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baby or one whose complications, whatever they may be, must be accepted
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and endured by both child and family.
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</p>
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<p>
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Since the late 1800s, when osteopathy became a medical discipline in the
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United States, osteopathic physicians have assisted babies in their
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recovery from the birth experience, thereby helping to promote the best
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possible health and development of the child.
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</p>
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<p>
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Osteopathy is a medical discipline focusing on re-establishing and
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maintaining the natural relationships of bones, muscles, membranes,
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tissues and fluids within the body. Osteopathic manipulative treatment
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promotes the body's ability to function, develop and heal itself by
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addressing problems found in these structural components.
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</p>
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<p>
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Many older children experiencing learning or behavioral difficulties
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have a history of a traumatic birth or early childhood head blows which
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went uncorrected. Children who suffer from recurrent ear or sinus
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infections frequently have a similar medical history. Although it is
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most useful to address the structural problems originating in the birth
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process shortly after birth, much improvement in the child's condition
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can be seen if treatment is initiated later.
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</p>
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<h2>The Birth Process</h2>
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<p>
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Birth often results in harmful structural changes. The likelihood of
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trouble increases when the labor and delivery is prolonged or augmented
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by pitocin or when forceps or vacuum extractions are necessary. In
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vaginal delivery, the infant skull is asked to make its passage through
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too small a space. In response, the bones of the skull overlap to
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decrease the size of the head, and often do not return to their natural
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positions after delivery. In order to travel through the birth canal,
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the infant's head must bend markedly backwards. This puts pressure on
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two nerves (vagal and hypoglossal) which can result in the colic and
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sucking disturbances often seen in newborns.
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</p>
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<p>
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Although C-section babies are spared some of the complications of
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vaginal deliveries, they are also robbed of some of the benefits. The
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transit down the birth canal applies a variety of pressures on the
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infant's head which help to free it from the shape it was molded to in
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utero. The transit through the birth canal also compresses and
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re-expands the chest wall preparing the baby to breathe and to clear
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fluid from the lungs.
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</p>
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<p>
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Once the baby is born, osteopathic physicians hope to hear a fairly
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immediate and powerful birth cry. Fetal life would be fraught with low
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oxygen levels if it were not for the mother's higher blood hemoglobin
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levels and the baby's faster heart rate. The transition from life
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outside is a critical time in which the baby loses its maternal support
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and must provide for its own oxygen.
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</p>
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<p>
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A strong birth cry probably serves two crucial functions. It opens the
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alveolar air sacs throughout the lungs, thereby ensuring adequate levels
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of oxygen so essential to brain development. It may also increase the
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internal pressure within the skull helping to re-expand those bones and
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membranes which were compressed in the birth process.
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</p>
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<h2>Seeking Treatment</h2>
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<p>
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The infant will often communicate the presence of a problem by being
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irritable or difficult to calm. In addition, excessive wakefulness at
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night or reluctance to fall asleep, spitting up or vomiting can have
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their origins in structural disturbances. A parent or health care
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professional may notice visual signs of a structural problem such as
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overlapping of joint lines on the infant's skull which do not level out
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in the first week of life. Visual asymmetries, such as one side of the
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forehead further forward than the other, the two ears positioned
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differently or the neck held to one side, can and should be corrected.
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</p>
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<p>
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As the baby gets a little older, a parent may notice developmental
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delays. Although there are many reasons that children fall behind a
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normal developmental timetable, some can be successfully addressed
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through osteopathic treatment.
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</p>
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<p>
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The brain does rapid and critical development in the first year of life.
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The nerve pathways are designed to lay themselves down in precise
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geometric relationships. Even slight distortions in the structure of the
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skull can impair the development of the nervous system. These can
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manifest in developmental delays early in childhood and potentially more
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serious learning difficulties later.
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</p>
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<p>
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Some children suffer from medical conditions for which conventional
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medical care has little to offer, conditions such as Down Syndrome or
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cerebral palsy. Osteopathic treatment does not alter the underlying
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genetic defect or birth injury factors, but it can be very effective in
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enhancing the child's functional capabilities as well as improving
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general health and quality of life for the child and family.
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</p>
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</Article>
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);
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};
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export default ArticlePediatricTreatmentForNewborns;
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