Breastfeeding After Breast Reduction Surgery

What Women Need to Know

By Lea Barton, published Apr 15, 2007
Published Content: 133  Total Views: 126,150  Favorited By: 18 CPs
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Breastfeeding after a breast reduction surgery is an option many women think is unavailable. Surgical techniques for breast reduction surgery, however, have improved to the point where more than fifty percent, and possibly as many as eighty percent, of all women who want to breastfeed after breast reduction surgery can do so, depending on surgical technique.

Breast reduction surgery, or "reduction mammaplasty," involves the removal of breast tissue when a woman's breasts are too large or out of proportion with her body. The patient requests a consultation with a plastic surgeon, and when she wishes to breastfeed after breast reduction surgery, the surgeon will explain the techniques used to preserve mammary glands, canals, and tissues.

In many cases, the breast reduction itself looks very different from a breast reduction surgery performed on a patient who does not care about breastfeeding after the surgery. The surgeon will use different incisions, tissue removal procedures, and different scar patterns to give mothers who wish to breastfeed as much of the areolae, mammary glands, and canals she needs to successfully breastfeed a baby.

Diana West's book "Defining Your Own Success: Breastfeeding After Breast Reduction Surgery" has become the definitive breastfeeding guide for women who choose to breastfeed after reduction surgery. In addition, message boards and support groups have cropped up throughout the Internet for women who choose or hope to breastfeed after this procedure.

In some cases, mothers can produce all of their baby's breastfeeding needs. In most cases, however, the baby can get some breastmilk, but requires breastfeeding supplementation with artificial baby milk of some sort. To boost supply, mothers who have breast reductions are urged to avoid peppermint, cabbage, and decongestants, which decrease milk supply, and to eat oatmeal and fenugreek, which increase milk supply. Pumping around the clock every three hours is important for mothers who have had this procedure; maintaining a steady milk supply helps with breastfeeding.

Breastfeeding After Breast Reduction Surgery

Breastfeeding after reduction surgery is possible!

Credit: istockphoto.com

Copyright: istockphoto.com

Comments
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This is very good information!

Posted on 05/22/2007 at 8:05:00 PM

 
Important info! Thanks for this article! :)

Posted on 05/20/2007 at 11:05:00 AM

 
Thanks for writing this! I always wondered, but was to timid to ask. I thought I must be the only one who wondered about it, LOL. :)

Posted on 05/20/2007 at 10:05:00 AM

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