After the meconium clearing, watery, possibly seedy,
mustard colored stools are a sign of good health in exclusively breastfed babies.
Not exact matches
This
stool is often yellowish - brown in
color and is similar to
mustard in consistency.
The normal breastmilk
stool is pasty to watery,
mustard colored, and usually has little odor.
Success at nursing can be measured by whether the baby seems content afterward, produces at least six wet diapers and several fairly liquid,
mustard -
colored stools each day and wakes up at least every four hours around the clock to be fed.
I'd never seen newborn poop before, so its transformation from sticky, black meconium to green transitional
stool to seedy,
mustard -
colored breast milk poop was, well, startling.
After the first couple of days your infant's
stools should be
mustard colored, seedy and loose.
In the meantime, pay attention to his diapers: He should have six to eight wet ones and at least two «seedy,»
mustard -
colored stools daily by the time he's 7 days old.
In the first month, your baby has at least three
stools a day and they lighten to a yellowy -
mustard color by the fifth day after birth.
The
stool should be completely yellow (sort of like the
color of
mustard) by your baby's seventh day of life.
In addition to wetting, your baby should also be having frequent
mustard -
color stools — or dry dark
stools that gradually lighten in
color by the fifth day.
By his fifth day of life, your baby should be having yellow or
mustard -
colored stools and wet diapers every few hours.
The number of dirty diapers also increases, and the
stools should be changing in
color and consistency from the dark, tarry meconium
stool to a
mustard - yellow, loose and seedy
stool.
The
stools will transition from meconium to a green - brown and then yellow -
mustard color.
They have at least three
stools each day and the
stools lighten to a yellowy -
mustard color by the fifth day after birth.