tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2074245988180152453.post605583128125733223..comments2023-12-21T03:45:20.189-08:00Comments on Say What?: On Nexium and Symptoms of Silent Refluxleahhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05004783118268323560noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2074245988180152453.post-88213564919895529722009-09-03T17:52:01.440-07:002009-09-03T17:52:01.440-07:00I definitely don't have the experience you guy...I definitely don't have the experience you guys do, but in general, the colder something is the less you taste it... maybe VERY cold water would help?<br /><br />Just guessin',<br /><br />JulieHerding Grasshoppershttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15668974245505544238noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2074245988180152453.post-58412272686955503602009-09-03T11:00:13.959-07:002009-09-03T11:00:13.959-07:00oh and onto another battle for you! I was assuming...oh and onto another battle for you! I was assuming the Nexium was tasteless and you mixed it with his milk! UGH. I wish I had some good advice for you. K was a horrible med taker and we had to do the whole "pin her body on the floor while she screamed and spit it back out at us" act. We always joked how we were waiting for her head to spin in circles and her to puke all over us. lol <br /><br />I like the sweetner idea ... I wonder if they can do this with the powder too. Good luck Leah! Even with this, it's so nice to hear your little guy is on the road to feeling better!tammyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11440760114820803415noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2074245988180152453.post-42113729933003054902009-09-02T19:26:52.633-07:002009-09-02T19:26:52.633-07:00It certainly would be a challenge to start nasty t...It certainly would be a challenge to start nasty tasting meds at the age of two. X has been taking his bitter reflux meds since he was two months old. The meds both come in liquid form, having been mixed at the pharmacy with a sweetening ingredient for the very purpose of convincing him to swallow it. We tried every method (and trick) of getting the meds down his throat, and the older he got, the more clever he got! We settled on using a dropper and placing it at the back of his cheek, squeezing a little at a time so that he was forced to swallow but would not gag. Now he is so accustomed to the taste and the routine that he sucks the meds from the droppers willingly, though sometimes after a fun game of chase. <br /><br />After X was medicated (with industrial strength doses according to our pediatrician), the screaming and vomiting dramatically decreased, rendering the reflux symptoms mostly silent. No neck tugging, but often thirsty and nightly waking because he WAS typical in that lying down caused more reflux. He still wakes up about once a week quite congested from a minor bout of reflux, but after 20 minutes of being upright combined with sucking on his bottle, he is breathing clearly again. Gravity is a good friend to us! <br /><br />I understand the heartbreak of watching your child suffer with the pain of chronic severe reflux. Poor little guy! I hope this medication kicks in and he starts feeling better.xraevisionhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08379269876085160558noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2074245988180152453.post-41611463300883888132009-09-02T13:25:19.571-07:002009-09-02T13:25:19.571-07:00Wow. So glad you got to the bottom of this! E also...Wow. So glad you got to the bottom of this! E also is a silent but severe type, so I recognized all those symptoms quickly. These poor little fellows!<br /><br />We have had success asking the pharmacist add a stevia sweetener to nasty medicines. E likes the tropical punch flavor and will take anything that way. We use a syringe and he laps it right up. I don't know if all pharmacies can do this, we are using a compounding pharmacy. I've heard of compounding pharmacies making transdermal creams for kids that refuse their meds any other way as well, but not sure what types of meds that works with. Good luck!!Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com