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Cabbage
Leaves and Engorgement
By Alan
Greene, MD FAAP
Painful
breasts are the second most common reason that
women give up breastfeeding
in the first two weeks. Engorged breasts can
hurt! And this can happen both at the beginning
of the nursing
session, as supply
adjusts to meet demand. The lactation
consultants at Stanford, where I work, recommend
cool cabbage leaf compresses between nursings as
part of their engorgement solution. Use green
cabbage leaves. Crush them with a rolling pin if
the leaves don't fit well to the shape of your
breasts. Or cut off the tops of the leaf veins
whatever gives you the best fit. The leaves can
stay on for about 20 minutes, two or three times
a day, perhaps with a cold compress over them.
Some suggest putting them on after every
feeding, and leaving them on until the cabbage
wilts, but others are concerned that this will
reduce the milk
supply. However, they can be left on
continuously. One study, published in the June
1993 Birth, found that women whose
engorgement was treated with cabbage leaves
experienced greater relief and were more likely
to continue nursing (76 percent versus 58
percent). Women who used the cabbage leaves
preventatively while their milk was first coming
in, tended to report less engorgement.
A
later study in the March 1995 Journal of
Human Lactation, found that chilled gel
packs and chilled cabbage leaves both result in
a significant drop in engorgement pain. Although
both worked equally well, the majority of women
studied preferred the cabbage leaves. In the
September 1995 issue of the same journal,
researchers reported that when women had chilled
cabbage leaves on one breast and room
temperature cabbage leaves on the other, the
relief of engorgement was significant, and was
the same on both sides; use whatever temperature
is more comfortable for you. I've even known
some women who like warm cabbage leaves. What
about the cabbage leaf extract creams you can
buy? The Cochrane Systematic Review, which
analyzes data from all available studies,
concluded in 2001 that although cabbage leaves
may help, cabbage leaf extract preparations do
not - save your money!
Some
remedies and solutions promoted to breastfeeding
women truly help; others are myths, or are even harmful.
Cabbage leaves are just one of many useful ideas
you might get from your local lactation
consultant.
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