Excessive drooling in 2 month old baby: Baby Drooling at 2 Months? Here’s What to Know!

Опубликовано: November 24, 2022 в 4:57 pm

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Категории: Baby

5 Ways to Reduce Drooling

March 25, 2019

Drooling is a fact of life if you’re a parent, but excessive drool can be a pain for both parents and their little ones. Too much drooling can cause ruined shirts and make it hard for your baby to swallow their drool without coughing or choking. Thankfully, there are a number of ways you can reduce drooling in your baby. Let’s take a closer look at the top 5 ways to reduce drooling in babies.

Use “drool” Toys:

This method will help prevent drool for a short time, though it won’t stop it completely. “Drool” toys are toys designed to be chewed on. They are especially ideal for reducing drooling that is being brought on by teething, but they can be used even if your baby is not currently teething or experiencing teething pain. Giving your baby something to chew on will stop the drool for a while, resulting in less overall drool during the day. Be sure to only pick toys designed for chewing to ensure maximum safety.

Use a Straw Cup Instead of a Sippy Cup:

This method will help stop excessive drool right in its tracks by encouraging your baby to swallow drool. If your baby is using sippy cups, replace those with a straw cup with a spill-proof design. Using a straw will help your baby increase the strength in their tongue, which will make it much easier for them to swallow drool. This will result in less overflowed drool over time.

Put Petroleum Jelly on their Chin:

This method doesn’t stop the drool, but it does stop the drool’s negative effects! This method may seem strange, but you can actually “trap” the baby drool with a smear of petroleum jelly on your baby’s chin. The petroleum jelly will soak up the drool as it flows down, so that it won’t travel down your baby’s neck and onto their clothing. It can also help prevent your baby’s skin from getting irritated by excessive or evaporated drool as an added bonus!

Limit (or eliminate) Pacifier Time:

This method reduces drooling by removing one of the causes for excessive drool. Pacifiers can be a great soother, especially in babies that tend to be fussy, but they also cause an increase in drool production; unfortunately, this means they are one of the reasons behind excessive drool in some babies. To use this method, reduce your baby’s pacifier time or eliminate it all together if possible.

Teach Them a New Habit:

This method teaches your baby to take care of their own drool. If you want your baby to take charge of their own drool, the best method is to teach them to take care of it on their own. To do this, help your baby learn to wipe their mouth when drool comes out and ‘suck’ it back into their mouth to be swallowed. It will take some repetition and may feel silly at first, but this method works—and gives your baby some newfound independence as well!

 

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Baby Drooling: When Will It Stop?

As a mother of three girls I can certainly remember the days of going through several shirts and bibs per day when my kids were teething. With each child, the drooling lasted for different lengths of time. When should drooling subside in a child’s development? Hopefully this article will help you decide if it is still OK for your child to be drooling at their age, or if you might need some help from an Early Intervention therapist.

Children’s teeth erupt at different frequencies and rates. I can remember that my nephews seemed to have a mouth full of teeth at 4 months old, and then my daughters didn’t get their first teeth until about 6 months of age. Drooling is very typical for teething children. Once you think all their teeth are in, then the two year old molars start, and after that there are even six year molars (that one threw me for a loop as a mother)! Typically children will stop drooling once their first set of teeth is complete. Some children will display minimal drooling when their two year molars are breaking through the gums, or you may see your child putting toys and fingers back in his or her mouth at this time.

So what does it mean if your child continues to drool past the teething stage? There could be several factors taking place when a child is observed drooling.

Congestion

First, is the child experiencing any kind of congestion? We all know that when we have a cold and stuffy nose it is impossible to breathe with our mouths closed. Children will often leave their mouths hanging wide open to breathe which can lead to drooling. This open mouth posture can also be due to an obstruction in their airway, such as enlarged adenoids or tonsils. Take notice if your child snores when he or she is sleeping. If you notice drooling and snoring, then I would recommend you bring these concerns to your pediatrician’s attention to further discuss if any additional evaluations need to be completed.

Low Muscle Tone

Another reason for increased drooling could be low muscle tone around the mouth. According to Wikipedia, low muscle tone (or hypotonia) is defined as a low amount of tension or resistance to the stretch in a muscle. This would also make the child present with an open mouth posture. The child may have had a hard time keeping a pacifier in his or her mouth or creating an effective seal around a bottle nipple or breast when eating. Low muscle tone can be improved with oral motor exercises that can be demonstrated to a parent by an Early Intervention occupational or speech therapist to practice with their child.

Pacifiers

Finally, through my 11 ½ years of experience in Early Intervention I would say that excessive use of a pacifier can also lead to increased drooling. Children who constantly have a pacifier in their mouths are trained to suck and swallow their saliva more frequently because they are creating an increased amount of saliva from the oral stimulation of the pacifier. It is when the pacifier is not in their mouth that you may notice more drooling. The child’s brain is not cueing them to swallow because they are not sucking on the pacifier at that time. They seem to forget that they need to swallow the saliva in their mouth so it just comes drooling out of their mouths.

In conclusion, you should see the drooling decrease significantly once all your child’s teeth have erupted.   If the drooling continues after the teething stage you may want to discuss your concerns with your pediatrician or request that your child be evaluated for Early Intervention Services.

By: Nicole Sciulli, MOTR/L

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Why the nose does not breathe when teeth are cut

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Contents

  • But should the process of teething still be accompanied by a runny nose and nasal congestion?

  • Runny nose during teething

In the first year of a child’s life, when his first milk teeth are cut, a fairly familiar picture is swelling of the gums at the site of eruption, profuse salivation, capriciousness of the child, a desire to put everything in his mouth and chew, in order to relieve itching and discomfort from the gums . In connection with abundant salivation, coughing and even (very rarely) vomiting are possible, when there is really a lot of saliva and the child chokes on it.

But should the process of teething still be accompanied by a runny nose and nasal congestion?

No, there shouldn’t be such manifestations. And if nasal congestion is still present during teething, then first of all it is necessary to exclude the parallel development of a respiratory infection, as well as an allergic reaction, especially if you introduce complementary foods or new foods to your child, or if there is an increased amount of respiratory allergens in the house, for example, the presence of domestic animals.

If there is neither one nor the other, then the vessels of the nasal mucosa of the child really expand and edema appears on such a provocative factor as teething, which should not be normal. Therefore, many otorhinolaryngologists tend to conclude that this is one of the signs of a child’s possible predisposition to vasomotor rhinitis. This vasomotor reaction usually resolves within 2-3 days after eruption.

Coryza during teething

Due to the fact that nasal congestion is still considered atypical for the process of teething, and especially if nasal congestion does not go away in 3-4 days, the child should be shown to an otorhinolaryngologist to exclude the infectious and allergic nature of the disease, as well as make sure that nasal congestion does not provoke inflammatory changes in the tympanic cavity, which, unfortunately, can be completely asymptomatic. In a specialized ENT clinic, using a video endoscope, an otorhinolaryngologist will look at the nasopharynx for hypertrophy of adenoid vegetations, which, although rare, still occurs at such an early age; if a pathology of the ears is suspected, a tympanometry study will be performed.