Noreen, You asked about pointing the baby's chin towards the affected area when a mom has a plugged duct, as you say: "due to increased suction that results from this position." I think it's not the *suction* we want (which I would guess is applied pretty equally all around the nipple "clock") so much as the increased "stripping" from the massaging action of the tongue and lower jaw on *their* quadrant of the breast. I also agree with Riordan and Auerbach's recommendation to point the nose toward the sore area, since the *nose's* quadrant would also benefit from being opposite the stripping of the tongue and lower jaw. Thus, for a plug at "2:00," the first choice would be to point the chin at "2:00," second choice to point the nose at "2:00." I don't know whether anyone has published work on differential emptying of areas of the breast related to baby's position. I remember that Peter Hartman, in his talk at the ILCA Conference in 1990, said that his group was working on developing a way to photograph the breasts with two cameras to yield a stereo image, which they hoped would give information more information about changes in the surface of the breast and thus about which lobes had been drained by feeding. Of course, a mother might develop a pretty good ability to estimate which lobes are drained just by palpating her breasts before and after feeds for awhile. Not as quantifiable for Scientific Research, but eminently practical! The other usual approaches to plugged ducts are moist heat---to dilate blood vessels and possibly milk ducts---and massage---to break up the plug mechanically. I would suggest that, since some degree of swelling is probably involved, cabbage leaves or even ice after feeds might help, too. Picture that little duct, smaller than the veins in your wrist, with a little plug of cottage cheese stuck in it. The milk piles up behind the plug like water behind a dam of leaves in a creek, increasing pressure on all the adjacent tissues. Applying heat should increase blood flow to the area, which will help if that extra blood flow brings extra oxytocin and makes a stronger MER, popping the plug out of the way like a surge of water behind the dam. Massaging may help break up the plug by opening some cracks in it, the way you might take a stick and poke at the leaves that make up the dam. But if these things don't work, then you'd like to reduce the pressure in the whole area by decreasing the tissue fluids and slowing blood flow for awhile. That's like waiting for things to get better in your dammed creek when the rain stops and the banks get less saturated with water. That's my image of what's going on. To carry the alanolgy even further (if you're not sick of it!), pointing the baby's chin at the plug is like installing a powerful "wave machine" downstream of the dam, which would help break up the plug. Pointing the baby's nose at the plug is like putting the "wave machine" upstream to send stronger surges of milk down the pipe and push harder at the plug. Well, it looks like the weather's clearing. So long!