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Date: | Sat, 18 Jun 2005 23:06:40 -0400 |
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Sarah's rumination that perhaps breastmilk itself promotes bleb
formation is an interesting insight -- after all, we often talk about
how human milk's growth factors help knit together the baby's gut
lining, and promote skin growth to heal skin abrasions, burns, etc.
Once the nipple is injured, perhaps the constant presence of fresh milk
promotes healing, and helps skin cells bridge across the wound, without
out knowing when to stop.
Are blebs as common in cultures where women breastfeed in the
short-and-frequent pattern? Maybe a pattern with long intervals gives
the skin more opportunity to bridge across into a complete seal. Do
women get blebs in the first month or so? Even when there's injury,
there's usually so much nursing going on that maybe there's no time to
seal up.
Just ruminating too.
Margaret Wills, LLLL, IBCLC
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