Routine Checkups
You can ask your health professional about your concerns regarding
your baby's crying during regularly scheduled
well-baby visits, but don't hesitate to call and
discuss them at any time. This is especially true if
comfort measures continually fail or you notice other
symptoms along with the excessive crying.
At the checkup, your health professional will want to determine
whether your baby has
colic or whether crying is possibly related to an
illness, an injury, or a medical condition. To find
out, your health professional:
- Will take a
medical history.
- Will perform a
physical examination of your baby.
- Will
ask if your baby has other symptoms besides crying.
- May ask you to
keep a
diary of your baby's activities.
- May ask
you to show how you feed and burp the baby.
- May ask how your
baby's crying affects you.
If the baby cries excessively and has other worrisome symptoms
(such as vomiting, diarrhea, blood or mucus in the stool, or fever), lab tests
or
X-rays may be done to help identify whether a
condition other than colic is responsible.
Medicines are sometimes prescribed for a baby who has
colic and also develops a temporary health problem, such as intestinal
discomfort. Medicines should be used exactly as prescribed and with close
monitoring.