Dear Lactnet friends & mentors:
First off all, thanks to all of you who advised me on my friend with the
disappearing supply. Her supply returned, as mysteriously as it left, after
a few days. And now to a new question...
Permission to post:
I am helping a mom who at day 13 has never felt her milk come in and
produced about 25 mls in a feeding/expression cycle during our visit -with
lots of help. She has some red flags for hormonally-driven low supply
and/or insufficient glandular tissue, despite normal-appearing breasts.
I am a new IBCLC, and I could use any advice you all have on lab tests to
request (and why), or appropriate galactagogues for the specific risk
factors she has.
And of course, if you have suggestions of any books or webinars that get
deep into the hormonal issues I want to learn!
Thank you all in advance for your wisdom!
April
PREGNANCY/POSTPARTUM:
-
Still producing red blood intermittently at day 13 sounds like
spotting, not clots or soaking pads. [beta-hCG test / ultraound]
-
Docs told her she had an unusually shaped placenta two distinct lobes,
joined together by some placental tissue.
-
Baby was very large for gestational age bordering on macrosomic but
she denies gestational diabetes or excessive maternal weight gain in
pregnancy.
-
Her breast veining is faint barely visible. Other than that, breasts
appear normal: round in all quadrants and symmetrical, normal areolar
appearance, spacing not too wide. I didn't palpate for glandular tissue
because I've been trained to generally avoid touching womens' breasts, and
am not sure I would recognize the feel of normal vs. abnormal glandular
tissue. She has normal breast and nipple sensation.
-
Tenderness increased in pregnancy. Husband (but not mom herself) noticed
breast growth.
-
Milk is white, thin, and flows easily doesn't look like colostrum. [Is
it still worthwhile to request tests for testosterone=GOTL cyst?]
-
There are no clinical signs of hyperandrogenism or androgenous body
type; denies blood loss, diabetes, thyroid, hypertension or fertility
problems. No surgery, spinal cord injury, etc. [Test TSH anyway?]
EARLY BREAST DEVELOPMENT:
-
She took hormonal birth control pills continuously from the age of 13
until this pregnancy at 33, prescribed for very irregular periods (two
weeks of bleeding, a two-week break between periods, etc.).
-
She feels she didn't notice significant breast growth after starting
birth control pills in puberty. Started as an A-cup and was a B-cup by time
of pregnancy, but she attributes that to weight gain in adulthood. She has
a slim build. [Mom is taking an herbal blend with Goat's Rue.]
MANAGEMENT:
-
Daughter born at 40 weeks via C-section after long and arduous labor
with lots of IV fluids. After separation for the first hour, mom began
breastfeeding. She has fed around the clock on demand, with at least 10
feedings in a typical day, sleeping no longer than 3-4 hours without
emptying the breast. Breasts feel softer/looser after feedings/expression.
Since day 3 mom pumps after most feedings with a rental-grade pump, at
first with flanges too small but did get a size that fits. Mom did have
lots of edema, throughout her whole legs, which has resolved.[Prolactin
levels? And given her relatively good early stimulation, might domperidone
help?]
-
Baby has a posterior tongue-tie which is relatively mild by which I
mean that compared to most PTT babies I see, she produces a better pull
on mom's nipple, and causes less nipple compression. TT does cause skin
irritation to the nipple face. [Mom will think over frenotomy.]
-
Mom had been using SNS for all supplementation but found it stressful
and has just switched to bottle. I suggested breast for dessert, alternate
massage before and after MER, switch nursing, hands-on pumping with hand
expression, and paced bottle technique. We optimized latch and positioning.
-
Baby transferred 18 mls in a feeding with only one obvious MER despite
lots of supportive techniques. Mom then expressed 7 mls. Baby was born at 8
lbs 6 oz, dropped to 7 lbs 8 oz within 2 days (IV fluids?), and is 8 lbs
1.9 oz per my scale at 13 days.
--
April Rosenblum, IBCLC
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