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Date: | Fri, 27 Apr 2007 11:45:19 -0400 |
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I don't think there's enough evidence to make a new category of immature
glandular tissue, I think it all falls under mammary hypoplasia
somewhere in the life cycle. Insufficient glandular tissue is a
developmental problem of the breast, in that proliferation of the future
milk making tissue did not happen properly. This can happen anywhere
along the chain from the earliest mammary pit during early fetal
development to failure of proliferation during pregnancy, to failure of
onset of copious milk secretion. There are different windows of
opportunity involved and different hormones, and Lisa Marasco has made
teasing this all out her life's work.
If we could identify when the problem started, we might be able to
intervene. In the meantime, things to explore include: breast changes
during pregnancy, PCOS and other insulin metabolism issues,
hypothyroidism, and timely removal of FIL right after birth.
Progesterone deficiency and testosterone overload have all been shown to
impact breast development and lactogenesis. Pushing lots of stimulation
to increase prolactin levels may help after birth (remember the great
article that Huggins and Petok did in Clinical Issues in Human Lactation
on the topic) and fixing metabolic issues may help as well (metformin
for PCOS, thyroid replacement for hypothyroidism).
If the breasts you are looking at seem "inactive", that might point to
problems in stimulation or later stages of milk making tissue
proliferation/maturation/activation. And remember that the fat tissue is
not always affected, so that breasts with insufficient glandular tissue
may look fairly normal, or may look globally hypoplastic (fat and
glandular tissue both undeveloped).
Catherine Watson Genna, IBCLC NYC
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