And infants who inherit a condition
called galactosemia should not be breast - fed.
Your baby has a rare condition
called galactosemia and can not tolerate the natural sugar, called galactose, in breast milk.
Now, before I outright say this isn't true, it can be — but the chances of a baby having the only true allergy to human breastmilk or lactose in any form,
called galactosemia, affects only 47 babies in the US per year... however, 150 people die annually from a falling coconut hitting them on the head.
An infant born with a condition
called galactosemia can not metabolize lactose, a sugar found in all mammalian milk, and must be fed plant - derived formula.
One of these situations is in infants with a rare disorder
called galactosemia.»
«The most likely condition being referenced is a rather uncommon condition
called galactosemia,» Sproat says.
Not exact matches
Sometimes a baby can be born with a condition
called primary lactase deficiency or with
galactosemia, in which they can't tolerate breast milk.
A less severe form of
galactosemia is
called Duarte's
galactosemia.
Galactosemia is a disorder that affects how the body processes a simple sugar
called galactose.
Galactosemia type II (also
called galactokinase deficiency) and type III (also
called galactose epimerase deficiency) cause different patterns of signs and symptoms.