Early 1994 surgery vagotomy, partial gastrectomy
with pyloric valve removal.
If your baby is diagnosed
with pyloric stenosis, usually by an ultrasound, he'll need an operation to open the blockage at the outlet of his stomach.
Not exact matches
But there may be other explanations as well, such as lactose intolerance, milk protein allergy,
pyloric stenosis (a condition that can be fixed
with surgery), Laryngomalacia (another condition that grows away) and probably other reasons too.
Sure enough he had
pyloric stenosis, which was fixed
with a quick little surgery and he was a lot better after that.
From what I'd read, it sounded like my baby had silent reflux, a disease in which his stomach's
pyloric valve didn't close completely, and milk, mixed
with stomach acid, splashed up into his esophagus.
Pyloric stenosis is a problem
with a baby's stomach that causes forceful vomiting.
The symptoms of
pyloric stenosis generally appear between two and eight weeks
with frequent spitting up, or projectile vomiting.
But when you drink coffee (the same goes for nicotine), it goes into «IDGAF» mode by skipping all of that pH jazz and blasting itself through the
pyloric sphincter
with the food that has yet to be digested into your stomach, which can lead to digestive issues such as a damaged intestinal lining, leaky gut and food allergies.