Sometimes, after giving birth, pregnant women are unable or unwilling to breastfeed their children due to various reasons. However, will the child remain healthy without breast milk?
Breast hyperplasia is also a common gynecological disease in daily life. It is said that women who do not breastfeed after childbirth are more likely to suffer from breast hyperplasia. So, can they not breastfeed after childbirth?
What are the problems of not breastfeeding after giving birth?
1. Be careful about the causes of breast hyperplasia!
Squeezing the cleavage is more likely to cause breast hyperplasia. Gynecological experts remind that the result of squeezing the cleavage for a long time is to reduce or prevent the return of lymph fluid in the breast, causing local qi and blood to be blocked, causing breast hyperplasia, and long-term chest movement limitation, which will also affect normal breast function.
breathe.
In addition, cleavage squeezing causes long-term pressure on the fiber in the breasts and breast ducts, which will affect the secretion and discharge of postpartum milk, directly affecting future breastfeeding.
In fact, if you take the time to squeeze your breasts to do some exercise and eat delicious food, you can also create perfect breasts.
Seven major causes of breast hyperplasia 1. Daily life is high in fat and greasy.
A stimulating diet can change the endocrine environment and enhance or prolong the stimulation of breast epithelial cells by estrogen.
Bad lifestyle habits such as drinking and smoking can induce breast disease.
2. Most patients with long-term bad mood are anxious, nervous, restless, irritable and other personalities. They lack calm thinking to various external stimuli and react too strongly. It is difficult to calm down after being emotionally aroused.
Strong emotional reactions affect normal social adaptation, often causing them to be in a bad mood, leading to dysfunction of the thalamus-pituitary-ovary axis, resulting in high estrogen, insufficient progesterone, and disordered breast structure.
, causing breast lobule hyperplasia.
3. Long-term use of estrogen-containing health products and contraceptive pills. Long-term excessive intake of estrogen in the human body will lead to endocrine imbalance. Nowadays, the feed used in artificially raised aquatic products and poultry contains hormone ingredients. Long-term consumption is harmful to the mammary gland.
4. Multiple miscarriages: During the 6th week of pregnancy, the estrogen and progesterone secreted by the embryonic villi will stimulate breast hyperplasia. If multiple abortions are performed, the hyperplastic breast tissue will not easily atrophy, and it will be more difficult for it to return to its original shape and form lobular mammary glands.
5. Old age, unmarried age, and first birth are also causes of breast hyperplasia.
Judging from clinical data, the incidence rate of breast lobule hyperplasia in elderly unmarried women and women who are too old for first childbirth is higher than that of women of the right age for marriage and childbirth.
6. Excessive sexual intercourse. For women, breasts are not only lactation organs, but also sexual organs.
During sexual life, the breasts will also undergo cyclic changes. When they are excited, the breast veins will be congested, the breasts will be enlarged and plump, the areola will be congested, and the nipples will be erect. After orgasm, the above symptoms will gradually recover.
These responses are modulators of mammary gland function.
If there is a long-term lack of sexual life, it is easy to induce breast lobule hyperplasia and the occurrence of breast cancer.
7. Breastfeeding without breastfeeding after delivery can increase the baby's resistance, enhance the emotional communication between mother and baby, and reduce the incidence of breast hyperplasia and breast cancer.
Preventing and treating breast hyperplasia starts with daily eating habits: 1. 3 cups of boiled water a day. Everyone has different needs for water. It is recommended to ensure three cups of water a day, one cup after getting up in the morning, one cup before lunch, and one cup before get off work.
Carry a water bottle with you when you go out or exercise and refill it at any time.
2. A cup of milk in the morning and evening. The shape of breasts is mainly determined by fat content. Good nutritional status is beneficial to the development and shape maintenance of breasts.
Studies have found that women who eat two servings of low-fat dairy products per day can reduce their chances of developing breast cancer before menopause.
Drinking two cups of milk every day can not only ensure basic nutritional needs, but also be beneficial to breast health.
3. Eat soy products every day. The plant isoflavones contained in soybeans can inhibit tumor growth and prevent cancer, especially breast cancer.
4. Reduce salt intake and avoid high-salt foods such as hot sauce, mustard, pickles, sausages, potato chips, shrimp crackers, and spicy dried tofu.
5. Eat more fresh fruits and vegetables. Fresh vegetables are rich in vitamins, minerals and dietary fiber, which can effectively resist oxidation and help the body resist various diseases including breast cancer.
6. Eat whole grains with fine grains. Whole grains are rich in fiber, which promotes intestinal peristalsis and helps the body detoxify. It can also reduce the concentration of low-density cholesterol and triglycerides and delay glucose absorption after meals.
2. Main benefits of postpartum breastfeeding. Benefits of breastfeeding to mothers: 1. Breastfeeding can help the mother regain her body shape. Breast milk allows the baby to have a healthy body. Breastfeeding will also help the mother regain her body shape.
Breastfeeding can effectively consume the fat accumulated in the mother's body during pregnancy, promote body recovery, and avoid postpartum obesity.
Wearing a suitable pure cotton bra during breastfeeding can make the breasts fuller and prevent breast sagging.