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Date: | Sun, 18 Jan 2009 00:00:59 -0500 |
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This is entirely anecdotal and I have not got any evidence to show that this will be the case
for every mother, but I thought I'd share. I had a terrible case of thrush that hung on for a
very long time, at the beginning it was easily harbored in cracked in bleeding nipples.
Knowing I was returning to work full-time at 10 weeks PP, I could not bring myself to dump
the milk.
I froze it and used it several weeks later. The milk was not heated to a hot enough
temperature to kill an infection of any sort. It was gently warmed in the usual way that you
would advise a mother to warm breastmilk in a cup of warm (not hot) water, having been
thawed overnight in the refrigerator the night before. I pumped and held my body and the
horns in such a way that the milk sprayed directly down into the horn, rather than by
touching my breast first and dripping or flowing into the horn. All of that milk was fed to
my babies and there was no subsequent recurrence of thrush on my breasts, in their
mouths, or as a diaper rash.
According to Dr. Hale in his session at the 2007 LLLI Conference, yeast infection does not
exist internally in ducts, it exists externally also. If this is true, then presumably, a mother
could be very careful with the method of collecting milk and avoid contamination with
external surfaces.
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