Books

The Celle Seminars_Page 369

Celle Seminar I, Case 14: Chronic Vomiting

irritation in her throat; still, she does like food. There are certain foods that she likes especially; she likes to chew them, but she can’t swallow them.
(G.V.): And how is her vomiting? Is it sudden? (Mother): Everything comes out. Sometimes afterwards it is more forceful and more conies out, but at other times she just vomits, especially when she is very excited. For example, I always try to prevent her from screaming because if she screams for a while, she will also vomit everything out. Sometimes it is worse in the morning. The first bottle in the morning is the worst; sometimes she’ll open her mouth afterwards to yawn and everything comes out again. This can also happen when she screams. She likes to scream for fun sometimes and then she vomits. Screaming seems to cause an irritation, and then the next moment she vomits. (G.V.): Is she anemic? (Mother): I don’t think so.
(G.V.): Do you only give her milk, or do you combine food and then make it liquid? (Mother): I combine milk and food. (G.V.): What kind of food?
(Mother): I give her a kind of milk—synthetic baby food for very small babies—and I put some grains in it, some whole grains. I cook it and then I mix it so that it’s quite liquid. The milk I give her is not real milk, it’s so-called denatured milk that they use for allergic children. I give this to her because when she was small, she not only had eczema but also an exanthema on her face and on her forehead and cheeks sometimes. She had to rub her nose, her eyes and her face a lot. I was breast-feeding her plus giving her this baby milk. They did not allow me to breast-feed her exclusively because she was so weak. I was told at the hospital that she should have a mixture of mother’s milk and real milk. I thought that this might be bad for her, and that’s why I gave her denatured milk for allergic children. She doesn’t have the exanthema anymore. Now I try to give her real milk, but she can’t di-

369