BABY POOP: WHAT NEW PARENTS NEED TO KNOW
Posted by Dr Mike on Jul 05 2006
Interested in learning more about baby poop? Dr Mike discusses what’s normal and what’s not in episode 16 of PediaCast!
Newborn babies don’t do much. They cry and sleep. They gaze around some. They eat and spit-up. They pee and poop. Really, that’s about it. So it’s easy to see why new parents focus on their infant’s bowel habits. Of course, relatives are also responsible. Everyone has an Aunt Betty (or maybe it’s your Mother-in-law) whose goal in life it is to voice concern about everything. “He poops too much. She doesn’t go enough. It’s too hard. It’s too soft. Why’s he always grunting like that?” Often new parents aren’t concerned until someone convinces them of a so-called problem.
The trouble with baby poop is the wide-degree of variation. Some infants stool shortly after every feeding, while others go once a week. There’s also a wide-range of thickness–from thin liquid to clay patties. And then there’s color: yellows, greens, browns, reds, and blacks. Let’s take a quick look at each of these factors and discuss what’s normal and what’s not.
Stool frequency depends on how much stool your baby makes and how quickly the intestine moves it down the pike. The amount of stool is dependent upon two variables–how well your baby’s intestine absorbs food and how many bacteria live in the gut. Since a baby’s ability to absorb food changes over time, the amount of residue left over also changes. Typically there is more residue to stool out in the first few weeks of life. Then, as your baby’s intestine matures, absorption improves and the amount of residue decreases. Thus, babies who used to poop several times a day may slow production down to once every couple days.
On the other hand, bacteria may have the opposite result. As a baby matures, more and more bacteria populate the gut. They are important to the digestion process and are one of the reason baby stool changes in character over the first few months of life. But as their numbers increase, the body eliminates more and more of them in the stool. Stool bulk increases as the number of bacteria increases, and increased stool bulk leads to more frequent bowel movements.
Another factor affecting stool frequency is transit time. Some guts work faster than others. So what’s normal? Well, some newborns will have a stool every time they eat, while others will go every few days. If your infant’s stools are more than three or four days apart, it may still be alright, but you should give your child’s doctor a call and let him know.
Stool consistency is another important consideration. If your baby’s stools are always slimy like mucus or thin like water or thick like clay, talk to your doctor. The ideal consistency of newborn stool is like mustard, but some variation on this may be okay.
Also pay attention to color. Bright red usually means blood. Bring this to your doctor’s attention right away. Possible causes include milk allergy, a crack in the skin around the anus, or (rarely) a more serious internal problem of the intestinal tract. Black tar-like stool is normal during the first few days of life. But if it remains this way long or becomes this way again, talk to your doctor. It could be a sign of bleeding in the gut.
Other colors depend on diet and the make-up of intestinal bacteria. Normal colors can range from pale yellow to dark green and light tan to dark brown.
Putting this all together, normal baby poop should be the consistency of mustard. It may be yellow, green, tan, or brown and it may come several times a day or once every several days. Reasons to call your doctor include black tar-like stool, presence of blood, watery diarrhea, constant mucus, and thick or formed stool. Also let your doctor know if your baby routinely goes several days without passing stool.
A word about fussiness is in order. Many parents assume a fussy baby who has a bowel movement every few days is constipated. This may not be the case. Keep in mind that upset babies, whether they are upset from hunger or the pain of an ear infection or heart burn, will stiffen their bellies, draw up their legs, and pass gas as they bear down. You should not assume this behavior is from constipation, even if their bowels move irregularly. Instead, make an appointment with your child’s doctor for a thorough examination.
Okay, let’s say your infant is constipated. She has thick formed stool that is difficult to pass and she goes infrequently. Your doctor agrees your infant is constipated. What will he have you do? Here are some options:
RECTAL STIMULATION: Put a glob of lubricant on a rectal thermometer or Q-Tip. Insert the tip a quarter to half inch into the rectum, give a little twist, and pull back out. Often, this will stimulate a bowel movement within a minute or two.
GLYCERIN SUPPOSITORIES: These are available at most pharmacies. Use half a suppository to start, inserting it into the rectum. This works by increasing the water content in the stool through a process known as osmosis (think back to high school science class).
JUICE: Processed apple or prune juice from a grocery store (not fresh from a fruit stand) will also increase the water content of stool through osmosis. This works because undigested sugars make it all the way down to the large intestine and draw water into the bowel. Baby juice probably won’t work because it’s so dilute. Start with an ounce or two of full-strength processed juice. If it works, you may need to continue giving an ounce or two of juice once or twice a day to keep your baby regular.
ORAL MEDICATION: There are several of oral medications that work the same way as juice. Milk of Magnesia is available over the counter, while Lactulose and Miralax require a prescription. Oral medications are rarely necessary for young infants.
It’s important to consult your doctor before trying any of these methods. There are diseases, some of them serious, that mimic constipation–so don’t treat it without your doctor’s help.
Finally, a word is in order concerning some things you shouldn’t use to treat constipation. Kayro syrup and honey have the remote possibility of transmitting botulism to infants, so don’t use these products in children less than a year old. Likewise, unprocessed juice may contain harmful bacteria, such as E. Coli. Also, enemas are not recommended for infants–save those for the older kids and use them only under the guidance of your child’s doctor.
Baby poop is funny because it can be so different from one child to the next. And for some crazy reason, well-meaning relatives always seem to gravitate toward a newborn’s bowel habits. But don’t let Aunt Betty (or your Mother-in-law) get to you. Armed with the knowledge of what’s normal and what’s not, if she keeps pushing, feel free to teach her a thing or two.
COPYRIGHT 2006 MIKE PATRICK JR




































on 30 Dec 2006 at 5:44 pm 1 Faisal said …
Dear Sir,
My baby is 6 days old today. He is normal. He passed stools perfectly in the first 5 days. He was using formula milk + breastfeed. Since yesterday he is having more than 80% of breast feed but didnt pass any stool on the 6th day and now 7th day is started. Also we started giving him Fer-in-Sol drops for iron on the 4th day. I want to know if something is wrong. Is he not passing stools cauz of Drops or due to breastfeed and what shall we do now ?
Thanks
on 24 Jan 2007 at 6:05 am 2 Samantha said …
My son is 6 months old and we have begun introducing food into his diet. He has done well with rice cereal and carrots. We tried peas and he developed a rash, so we will try that again in a couple of weeks. So, after the pea disaster we chose to try sweet potatoes. When my son stooled this evening it was yellow, a bit like clay with mucus and it stank much worse than normal. Is this an allergic reaction to the potatoes possibly?
on 10 Feb 2007 at 1:24 am 3 Diana said …
My son is 5 months old and for the past week, has passed light green to light brown coloured stools of thin consistency. He passes a small amount after EVERY feed (every 2.5 to 3 hours), sometimes accompanied by the passing of a bit of gas.
The stools are not foul smelling and he isn’t dehydrated. He seems healthy and happy, but I’m worried as he will usually only produce one pasty dark green stool every 3 days.
He started solids about a week ago, and we stopped as soon as the symptoms occurred (he has been back on an exclusively formula/breastmilk diet for 5 days now) but it hasn’t made any difference. Could it have been the solids? He only had about 2 teaspoons of mashed rice/vegetables.
on 02 Mar 2007 at 8:37 am 4 Heather said …
Dr. Mike:
I just discovered your web site and podcast today. The information you provide is so valuable and I thank you.
My question is I have a 3 month old that suffers from alot of GAS. She has two to three poops a day always watery and brown. Today she had only one small green one. I am sure she has picked up a virus for she has a fever as well but the constant watery poops and gas bother me. She is only breastfed.
What could be going on?
on 06 Mar 2007 at 7:38 pm 5 Jennifer said …
My 5 month old son always has mucus in his poop. His doctor says that if he isn’t showing any signs of being ill or no abnormal behavior I shouldn’t worry about it, but I’m still concerned. He also has such large bowel movements at least once a day that it comes right out the back of his diaper. He is only breastfed. Do you have any suggestion about what the problem could be.
on 08 Mar 2007 at 11:41 am 6 Susan said …
Jennifer, your baby is fine. What you’re describing is a typical breastfed baby poop. My son’s poop looked like a mustard-mucas mixture, and they would go up the back of his diaper and spill out the top. The stools will change when he starts eating solids — but that doesn’t mean you should rush to do it.
on 09 Mar 2007 at 3:27 pm 7 Ferrell said …
Hello. My baby girl is 6 months old. She has been breastfed exclusively up to this point. About a week ago she began to want to eat every one to two hours, even at night. This is strange for her (even during a growth spurt) because she has always slept through the night ( around 7-10 hours). She would also only eat every 3 hours during the day. She was also eating rice cereal (about 2-3 tablespoons twice a day, plus a half a banana at lunch time. I talked to her pediatrican and she told me to increase the amount of rice cereal to 5 TBLS still twice a day. I started to do that, and then she began to not want breast milk more than every 4 hours. Now, she doesn’t want breast milk at all, and her stool is solid, and she cries when she has to poop because it’s hurting her. I tried decreasing the rice cereal so all she would have is my milk, and she still doesn’t want it except in the morning and right before bed, but she is only drinking about 3 ounces at each feeding and I’m pumping the rest out and putting it in the freezer. I tried to give her some water and she drank about 4 ounces of that, but didn’t even want any juice. She also will NOT have anything to do with formula. I don’t know what to do. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thank you so much.
on 09 Mar 2007 at 3:30 pm 8 Ferrell said …
By the way, she has plenty of wet diapers, so I don’t think she is dehydrated at all, but I don’t know.
on 14 Mar 2007 at 12:50 pm 9 Jennifer Batchelor said …
I am so desperate to figure out what is wrong with my Baby’s poop. She has had problems with bowel movements since she was about 2 weeks old (she is about 7 months old). She strains and pushes and screams (not like a normal baby) she just can’t push it out. At first they told me nothing was wrong, my Aunt had to show me about rectal stimulation, and we tried that for a few months and it worked really well. I had to take her to the hospital one day she had been 4 days without a bowel movement and had screamed for over 6 hours trying to push (loud painful screaming). They went in to retrieve it and told me to start giving her juice. She had prune juice everyday for several months but when she started on solids she had to go to the hospital again. It had been several days and she had been screaming. I now cannot get my baby to drink juice at all…not even water. If she sees a bottle that is not milk she immediately freaks out and will choke before she drinks it. So now I can’t get her to drink juice, rectal stimulation does not work anymore, she will not drink water, and she will not eat prunes or other fruits that would help her. Also her stool is not very hard, it is formed and so large that she cannot pass it. Sometimes I can press on her perinium and this will help her pass the stool. My doctors seem to think there is no problem. My daughter is generally a very happy baby and never seems to be upset when she is at the doctors office. She loves people and will laugh and smile some. The doctors say if I can console her at all there is nothing wrong…well I can console her but everyone that sees my daughter at her worse is in tears watching me deal with her, and tells me they had several kids and had problems with constipation and never ever saw a baby with problems like this. I could unserstand if this problem went away. But we deal with poop problems daily. Now that she is older if she goes 2 days she is completely miserable. As a younger baby she would start after just 1 day of no poop. I’m at a loss I have no idea what to do. I want to change doctors but my insurance is crappy so it isnt easy to do that. I have also used glycerine suppositories…she just pushes that out…but can’t push out formed poop. If her stool is not like water then it won’t come out on it’s own. Please tell me other things that could be wrong…I’m starting to think it is not constipation…what other problems could it be?
on 15 Mar 2007 at 8:48 am 10 Steffanie said …
Jennifer,
I am the mother of 7 children and my 2nd child ( daughter) did the same thing that you have described your baby doing. I was looking for information about baby stools because my 7th child is 7 weeks old and while he is only breastfed is only pooping every 4 days and is doing a lot of screaming and tooting in between…My oldest daughter had a problem called and anal fistula, meaning that she didn’t have an anal sphincter, she had a hole only. No one caught this until she was 10 months old. She was completely breastfed and when she started solids, the constipation began as well. I tried all of the things that you have tried to no avail. I went to 4 pediatricians and they all looked at me like I was crazy. I told them of my worry that she had almost no perineum and that I had to push on what little perineum she had to get her to poop….anyway…I finally found a pediatrician that figured it out right away. She had surgery at Children’s Hospital the next week ( 6 hours!) and they found exactly enough sphincter, in exactly the right place, and closed her fistula and made her a new sphincter. We spent months anally dialating her, micromanaged her diet to keep her stools firm, but not hard so that she could pass them. I am happy to tell you that she is almost 17 years old and perfectly fine. She never had a colostomy or needed any kind of post-surgical bowel training. I’m not trying to cause you alarm, but this is not something that all pediatricians have ever seen, so, it is important to ask another doctor. I hope this helps.
on 16 Mar 2007 at 2:02 pm 11 Harry said …
hi,
i have a newborn baby that is now 11 days old, her bowel movements previously were very healthy and very regular, mustard like, same as you stated was normal, but she hasn’t gone now for 2 full days and now we are starting the 3rd, she doesn’t cry unless she is hungry or dirty, other then that she is always happy, i am at a loss for ideas on what this may be. i talked with my mother who raised 4 boys and is also a nurse, she tells me that it is not good and i should try to use the glyserine sapposatories, i was wondering if i should just see if nature takes its course, intervine with suppositories, or take the baby to the doctors? i really need a consult on this one. thanks
on 16 Mar 2007 at 3:08 pm 12 Dr Mike said …
Hi everyone!
Thanks for all your great questions (and replies) regarding baby poop. I devote an entire episode to baby poop on PediaCast #16.
PediaCast is a Pediatric Podcast for Parents. If you have iTunes, you can listen/subscribe to the program (we are in the Kids and Family section of the iTunes Podcast directory).
You can also listen at your computer right on the website. Simply click this PLAYER link and scroll down to episode #16 to learn more than you ever wanted about baby poop.
If you have any other questions for me, click on this CONTACT link to submit a request, and I’ll do my best to address it in an upcoming episode.
Thanks everyone for contributing!
Dr Mike
on 19 Mar 2007 at 1:09 pm 13 Pharmacy Man said …
What do you do if the medication just isn’t helping enough? Like it did before. WBR LeoP
on 27 Mar 2007 at 7:22 am 14 Kathy said …
My daughter is one month old and I have recently stopped breastfeeding because I haven’t been producing enough milk. She’s been drinking Good Start Supreme with RHA and DH. For a while, she was having green, foul smelling poop and she would only poop about once a day. We were feeding her 2 oz. at the time. Just two days ago, we started giving her 3 oz. and now she poops after every single feeding, and her poop is mustard colored, with little grain like things in it and its the consistancy is somewhat thick (almost like peanut butter…sometimes a little thicker). Should I be concerned?
on 08 Apr 2007 at 12:25 pm 15 PediaScribe Blog » HOW DID YOU FIND US? said …
[…] Definitely a theme going here: • mucous poops in breastfed baby • toddler diarrhea • what to do when your infant will not poop • newborn green baby poop • infant bowel habits • slimy baby stool • baby poop prunes not working • toddler normal poop color (“baby poop” is the number one search term that lands people on Pediacast or PediaScribe because of this post: Baby Poop: What New Parents Need to Know!) […]
on 12 Apr 2007 at 3:13 pm 16 David said …
My son is around seven weeks old. When he wasborn he pooped once every day or every other day. Then it slowed down and now he hasnt pooped in over a week! The doctor said we should just wait it out, and my mother in law knows of some trick involving puting some sort of stalk of some plant (rosemry, maybe?) with oil but that seems a bit crazy to me…Anyone experienced anything like this? Any advice?
on 08 May 2007 at 2:51 pm 17 Rebecca said …
For those who have tried glycerine suppositories and their babies push them right out — I have found that I have to hold these in place until they melt (due to baby’s body temperature). This can take a minute or two. Then, voila!
on 14 May 2007 at 10:09 am 18 donna said …
Hi Doctor Mike. I have an 11 month old granddaughter with the exact same symptoms as Jennifer on item #9. My granddaughter has been to 3 different doctors (because of son in law’s job) and she is on Miralax for 6 weeks but when my daughter weans her from it, she goes right back to her painful movements. Her BM is the consistency of playdough…not hard or solid. My daughter is breastfeeding and what the baby goes through is awful to watch for all of us. She has her yearly appointment this Thursday….is there anything you can suggest she bring up to check into to see what is causing the baby so much agony? She’s healthy otherwise….Thank you for any help, Donna
on 31 May 2007 at 8:51 pm 19 Shonne said …
Hello There. I have a 7 week old daughter with a poop issue. She has wonderfully yellow poop (breast milk is the cause) , but it is thick (solid). We are using Enfamil ProSobee which was recommended by my pediatrician for gas and fussiness.
The problem is I am sure that it should not be thick?? I was consistant with mustard for the longest time and since the Soy formula…this has happened?
Any suggestions?? Please??
on 03 Jun 2007 at 6:53 pm 20 Miranda Farias/CA said …
My son he is 4 1/2 months old, has been using enfamil powder milk. But when I moved her I had to change it to Similac powder milk. Ever since then her hasn’t pooped for awile. Only about once or twice every other week or so. He crys his head off and it hurts him so much that i can feel it when he crys. I feel so bad for him that i stay up with him every night he is cring. i hate to see him cry. what should i do ? and what do u think is wrong with him.
on 06 Jun 2007 at 2:54 pm 21 DadEO said …
Have you seen the Wikipoopia™?
on 27 Jun 2007 at 1:07 pm 22 PediaCast: A Pediatric Podcast for Parents » PEDIACAST #16: IT’S ALL ABOUT THE POOP - BABY BOWELS said …
[…] You can READ much of the information I present in this podcast HERE. […]
on 27 Jun 2007 at 1:20 pm 23 PediaCast: A Pediatric Podcast for Parents » PediaCast 26 * bottles, bedtime, school, stool * 347-404-5437 said …
[…] LINKS Solve Your Child’s Sleep Problems LD Podcast PediaCast 16 - It’s All About the Poop - Baby Bowels Baby Poop: What New Parents Need to Know […]
on 08 Jul 2007 at 12:21 pm 24 Deana said …
5 month old son Quinn. he is breastfed. fed him acorn squash from a babyfood jar, (said it was for 4-6 mon olds) and he projectile vomitted after an hour. he was fine, not crying and smiling and happy. i figured he just couldn’t digest squash, didn’t sit well with him..will never feed it again. he handles peas and carrots fine.
he hasn’t pooped in 3 days. i gaave glycerin suppository last night…he had a small poop. it was not very much.
he usually poops 5-6 times a day..and a lot.
this is weird adn i’m concerned.
do i need to just wait it out or take him to the dr.
it’s sunday, so i’m wondering what to do.
thanks!
on 12 Jul 2007 at 1:39 am 25 Mommy said …
Hi! My son will be 3 months old in a week. He has had diahrea for 11 days. I have seen the doctor three times about this and each time the Dr says that as long as I am feeding him regularily it is ok. But I am very worried because he turns red in the face and strains a lot even though his bowel movements are very watery and mucous like, yellowish green in colour. Could somebody please help me understand what is going on?
on 12 Jul 2007 at 6:56 am 26 Dr Mike said …
Hello everyone!
Just a reminder… all questions must be submitted through the PediaCast contact page at pediacast.org or by emailing pediacast (at) gmail (dot) com. Be sure to read the “Terms of Use” page at pediacast.org before submitting your questions. Selected questions will be read and answered during an upcoming episode of PediaCast: A Pediatric Podcast For Parents. We regret we are unable to answer all questions because we get so many of them.
And remember… our discussions are of a general nature only. We do not diagnose medical conditions or formulate treatment plans for specific individuals. If you have a concern about your child’s health, be sure to call your doctor!