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I'm totally confused. How does that work? Does it happen before or after the baby comes or do they have to do something to you to make it come out?

2006-07-12 15:14:52 · 8 answers · asked by Reese 1 in Pregnancy & Parenting Pregnancy

8 answers

Your breast actually do not fully develop until you become pregnant. As soon as you become pregnant the milk ducts in your breast start to develop, this is why you may get very sore breasts during pregnancy. Over the next nine months the glands in your breasts that make milk are maturing and getting ready for your baby. When the baby is born hormones released by the labor signal the breast to start producing milk. So its not really an all of a sudden thing.

2006-07-12 15:21:14 · answer #1 · answered by cwoo 3 · 0 0

Before a woman gives birth, she has what is called "colostrum" that comes out of the nipples. This is not like milk at all. It's a little thicker and yellowish-clear. This can come out up to a few months before birth. After a woman gives birth, milk does not immediately come out. It is all a very hormonal thing. After the baby is born, that baby will LIVE and THRIVE on the colostrum for at least 2-4 days until the milk "comes in". It's important for the mother to nurse constantly to build up a good milk supply. Then somewhere between that 2-4 day period, the breasts become engorged, hard, and sore. But the baby will know what to do to make it better.

2006-07-12 15:25:47 · answer #2 · answered by texasmom23 2 · 0 0

No it would not damage. It would not even sense like some thing, if I wasn't paying interest and forgot to positioned a breast pad in my bra i'd not word the milk leaking till it replaced into too overdue. What does damage is the milk not popping out and backing up on your breasts. They get so finished they sense like exploding. My nipples ought to get extremely sore and that i'd be afraid they could damage even as my toddler ought to start up nursing, notwithstanding it would not. All I felt replaced into alleviation! those first few days should be awkward and there should be some discomfort even as you and your toddler figure issues out (starting up breastfeeding isn't as elementary as you would imagine, i replaced into very unlucky on that the front), yet once you get placed, there is not some thing painful about it. till you've a biter, for sure, yet that has not some thing to do with your milk. Congratulations on the toddler and strong success with your breastfeeding!

2016-11-01 23:11:25 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

usually you start producing milk while you are pregnant, your body has nine months to prepare the milk glands for nursing. The birth hormones and suckling by the baby trigger milk to come out and more milk to be made.

2006-07-12 15:22:54 · answer #4 · answered by Mina222 5 · 0 0

While you are pregnant your breasts will fill with colustrum or premilk its sometimes called. A few days after your baby is born after she nurses some your body will release a hormone that makes the reqular breast milk come in.

2006-07-12 15:18:29 · answer #5 · answered by ashez 4 · 0 0

Well although it is possible, you usually start lactating after you have the baby. Although before the milk comes through you will have colostrum. There are pumps available to help moms pump.

2006-07-12 15:19:21 · answer #6 · answered by Michelle 6 · 0 0

It has to do with a womans hormones. Her breasts will swell after getting pregnant. My wife had some difficulty getting started, but once she did....lets just say my son didn't go hungry.

2006-07-12 15:20:04 · answer #7 · answered by frofus 2 · 0 0

It can be both.

2006-07-12 15:17:28 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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