Those of you as dependent on this sleep board as me to maintain your sanity, will know that I've have posted on here loads about my sleep refusing DD (now 17 months). I've received loads of support that has got me through the long nights (and days) for which I am very grateful, so I thought I'd update you as we finally have some answers which may help some of you in a similar position.
Brief re-cap - DD was EBF (still BF, grrr, but that's another story), has had silent reflux on and off since newborn (on ranitidine), currently waking at least every 2 hours, wanting to feed and very gassy. Shhh-pat doesn't work. Gradual retreat hasn't worked. HV could only suggest CC.
Anyhooos, took matters into my own hands and spoke to the lovely Charlie at Milk Matters. And ta-da... it turns out that DD has tongue tie and a bubble palette.
So this explains the waking with wind (swallowing loads of air) and possibly the reflux, which would also explain the constant wanting to feed. Yes, there are some habitual things going on too and I'm not expecting DD to change her anti-social sleep patterns anytime soon, but now I know I'm not going mad, that it isn't my crap mothering skills and that something is not quite right!
After all this time and not one health professional has suggested or checked for TT. So thanks to Poppet and everyone else on here who suggested it (I was too sleep deprived to take it on board in the early days and dismissed it as a possibility as I'd seen a supposed BF expert from the NCT
).
NHS not interested in TT now and too traumatic to snip at this age, so we will try osteopathy and night weaning (not looking forward to that bit).
So I'd say to anyone who is having BF, weaning and sleep problems that don't seem to respond to any other solution, check for TT but ask the right person; there is a really useful article here that outlines the difference levels of experience of BF support workers.
I know this won't help many of the sleep problems on here (I guess some babies, probably mine included, just don't want to sleep
) but it might help a few.