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DOMPERIDONE
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//WHEN IS IT APPROPRIATE
TO USE DOMPERIDONE?
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Domperidone
must never be used as the first approach to correcting breastfeeding
difficulties. Domperidone is not a cure for all things. It must
not be used unless all other factors which may result in insufficient
milk supply have been dealt with first. (See Handout: Protocol
to Increase Intake of Breastmilk by the Baby). These other factors
include:
- Correcting the baby's latch so that the baby can obtain as
efficiently as possible the milk which the mother has available.
Correcting
the latch may be all that is necessary to change a situation
of "not enough milk" to one of "plenty of
milk".
- Using breast compression to increase the intake
of milk (Handout #15: Breast Compression).
- Using milk expression
after feedings to increase the supply.
- Correcting sucking
problems, stopping the use of artificial nipples (handout
#5: Using a Lactation Aid, and #8: Finger
Feeding) and
other stratagems.
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//USING DOMPERIDONE
FOR INCREASING MILK PRODUCTION
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Domperidone works particularly well to increase milk production
under the following circumstances:
- It has frequently been noted that a mother who is pumping milk
for a sick or premature baby in hospital has a decrease in
the amount she pumps around 4 or 5 weeks after the baby is born.
The
reasons for this decrease are likely many, but domperidone
generally brings the amount of milk pumped back to where it was
or even to
higher levels.
- When a mother has a decrease in milk supply,
often associated with the use of birth control pills (avoid œstrogen
containing birth control pills while breastfeeding), or
on occasion, for
no obvious reason when the baby is 3 or 4 months old, domperidone
will often bring the supply back to normal.
Domperidone still works, but often less dramatically when:
- The mother is pumping for a sick or premature
baby but has not managed to develop a full milk supply.
- The mother
is trying to develop a full milk supply while nursing an adopted
baby.
- The mother is trying to wean the baby from supplements.
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//SIDE
EFFECTS OF DOMPERIDONE
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As with all medications, side effects are possible, and many have
been reported with domperidone (textbooks often list any side effect
ever reported, but symptoms reported are not necessarily due to
the drug a person is taking). There is no such thing as a 100%
safe drug. However, our clinical experience has been that side
effects in the mother are extremely uncommon, except for increasing
milk supply. Some side effects which mothers we have treated have
reported (very uncommonly, incidentally):
- Headache which disappeared when the dose was reduced (probably
the most common side effect).
- Abdominal cramps
- Dry mouth
The amount that gets into the milk is so tiny that side effects
in the baby should not be expected. Mothers have not reported any
to us, in many years of use. Certainly the amount the baby gets
through the milk is a tiny percentage of what babies would get
if being treated for spitting up.
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//ARE
THERE LONG TERM CONCERNS ABOUT THE USE OF DOMPERIDONE?
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The manufacturer
states in its literature that chronic treatment with domperidone
in rodents has resulted in increased numbers of breast tumours
in the rodents. The literature goes on to state that this has never
been documented in humans. Note that toxicity studies of medication
usually require treatment with huge doses over periods of time
involving most or all of the animal's lifetime. Note also that
not breastfeeding increases the risk of breast cancer, and breast
cancer risk decreases the longer you breastfeed.
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//USING
DOMPERIDONE?
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Generally, we start
domperidone at 20 milligrammes (two 10 mg tablets) four times a
day. If taking domperidone 4 times a day is inconvenient, 30 milligrammes
(three 10 mg tablets) three times a day is fine. Printouts from
the pharmacy often suggest taking domperidone 30 minutes before
eating, but that is because of its use for digestive intolerance.
You can take the domperidone about every 6 hours, when it is convenient
(there is no need to wake up to keep to a 6 hour schedule-it does
not make any difference). Most mothers take the domperidone for
3 to 8 weeks. Mothers who are nursing adopted babies may have to
take the drug much longer.
After starting domperidone, it may take three or four days before
you notice any effect, though sometimes mothers notice an effect
within 24 hours. It appears to take two to three weeks to get
a maximum effect, but some mothers have noted effects only after
4 or more weeks. It is reasonable to give domperidone a trial
of at least 4 weeks before saying it doesn't work.
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//HOW
LONG CAN I USE DOMPERIDONE?
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When domperidone was being used for babies (and now that cisapride is off the market,
it is being used again), it was common for the babies to be on
the medication for several months. Since the amount of domperidone
that gets into the milk is very small indeed, from the baby's point
of view, there should be no issue in the mother taking it to increase
milk supply for several months.
Our experience with this drug is
that short-term side effects are very few and almost always
very mild. Worldwide experience with domperidone over at least
2 decades
suggests that long-term side effects also are rare. Some of
the mothers in our clinic, breastfeeding adopted babies, have been
on the medication for 18 months without any apparent side effects.
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//HOW
LONG DOES IT TAKE FOR DOMPERIDONE TO WORK?
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It
depends on the situation. In a situation where the mother had
had a good milk supply, but it decreased for some reason (e.g.
going on the birth control pill), domperidone often works very
rapidly to increase the milk supply. Often, within a day or two,
the mother is seeing a difference (and so does her baby). But
this is not always so, and in any situation, it
may take a week or more for the mother to get an effect. On occasion, we have
had mothers only starting to get an increase in their milk supplies
a month or more after starting to take it. Therefore, we generally
recommended that the mother take the domperidone
for at least 6 weeks in order to be sure whether it has worked or not.
It is
our impression that domperidone works best after the first
few weeks after the mother has given birth. This has not been
proved, but there are theoretical reasons why it may be so.
For this reason, we have often waited to prescribe it until
the baby is at least 3 weeks, mainly because we did not want
the mother to become discouraged if she did not see any rapid
increase in her milk supply.
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//HOW
DO I KNOW HOW LONG TAKE DOMPERIDONE?
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Usually, we ask
the mother take it for two weeks and re-evaluate. There are several
possibilities.
- The milk supply has increased substantially, to the point
where there is no longer a consideration of using supplements,
or
the mother has been able to stop supplements with the
baby continuing to gain well on breastfeeding alone.
- The milk
supply has increased to a point that the mother feels is
satisfactory. For example, she may still need to supplement,
but the baby does not fuss any more at the breast and drinks
contentedly.
In these two situations, we would ask the mother to start weaning
herself from the domperidone in this way.
- Most mothers are taking 2 tablets four times a day, or 3
tablets three times a day. When you are ready to start weaning
from
the domperidone, drop one pill, so that now, instead of
8 pills a day, you will be taking 7, or if you were taking
9 pills
a day, you will be taking 8.
- Wait 4 or 5 days, a week if
you wish. If you see no change in your milk supply, drop
another pill.
- Wait another 4 or 5 days. If you see no change
in your milk supply, drop another pill.
- Continue in this way
until you are down to no pills a day. If there has been no
decrease in your milk supply, or if there has
been a small decrease that does not affect the breastfeeding
and baby's weight gain, that's just what we hope to have happened,
and many mothers manage this.
- If, however, your supply diminishes significantly, return
to the previous effective dose and do not drop any pills
for a couple
of weeks at least.
- If you are keen to go off the domperidone,
after a couple of weeks on the same dose, start dropping
a pill a day, as in step
1 above. Some mothers, who were not able to get off the domperidone
with steps 1-4 above, can do it the second or the third time.
- You
may find that you have to continue a certain dose to maintain
your milk supply. But following steps 1-4 above will get you
to the lowest effective dose.
It is possible, however, that after two weeks, you are not where
you want to be. In that case, you should continue using the domperidone.
If you are still not where you want to be after 6 weeks of domperidone,
it is time to think some more about the domperidone. If you are
supplementing, and have managed to reduce the amount of supplement
from 14 ounces to 10 ounces, is it really worth taking a drug
in order to do this? If you feel it is, then continue with the
domperidone, but try weaning the number of pills down to minimum
number that maintain your milk supply, as above. If you do not
feel it is worth it, try weaning down as above, and if you don't
see any change once you get to no pills a day, fine. However,
if you do notice a real change in the milk supply as you lower
the dose, maybe the domperidone is more effective than you had
thought (remember, after 6 weeks, your baby is significantly
heavier, and it may be that instead of needing 14 ounces without
domperidone, the baby might actually need 20 ounces to maintain
good weight gain, in which case the domperidone is actually doing
something).
Remember: Before using domperidone, the breastfeeding should
be fixed, and as quickly as possible. This means:
- Getting the best latch possible. This alone may result in
the baby getting enough milk.
- Using compression to continue
milk intake by the baby.
- "Finish" one side before
offering the other (see protocol for increasing breastmilk
intake by the baby for an explanation
on how to know the baby is getting milk).
- Do not limit the baby
to one side if the baby is not getting enough. Switch to
the other side once the baby is no longer getting
milk even with the compression.
- Switch back and forth, as long
as the baby is getting good amounts of milk.
- See the protocol
for increasing breastmilk intake by the baby.
Handouts #19a and #19b. Domperidone. January 2003
Written by Jack Newman, MD, FRCPC.
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WARNINGS
Lupas: Alfalfa has been known to aggravate lupus and other auto-immune
disorders. Avoid alfalfa is you have an auto-immune problem.
Pregnancy: Fenugreek and Blessed Thistle are contraindicated
during pregnancy
Diabetics: Fenugreek may lower blood sugar levels.
Allergies: If you are allergic to other members of the Compositae
(daisy, ragwort) family of plants, you may be allergic to Blessed
Thistle. and or Chamomile.
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