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Date: | Tue, 20 Jan 1998 23:01:59 +0200 |
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This is my first time posting. I live in Israel. I am becoming a LC but
have been working with mothers for about a year. I am writing about my own
personal experience.
I developed severe excema only on my hands when pregnant with my first
child, and it carried through to nursing until she was 12 months and got a
bit better when I stopped nursing. With my second pregnancy, it stopped
totally, and returned in the hospital about 24 hours after delivery. I
suffered from SEVERE excema only on my hands for 17 months while nursing
my 2nd (very often). No doctor believed me when I said it was directly
related to hormones, although when I took 6 days of oral prednisone it
disapeared completely. Unfortunately, due to the fact I was nursing, I had
to stop after 6 days, and it came back full force. I tried every
medication and treatment that was possible for a nursing mother, and my
skin condition did not respond at all. I had a feeling the excema would go
away when I stopped nursing, and sure enough, I began to cut back on my
feedings, and got my daughter down to one a day. The week I felt myself
begin to ovulate for the first time since her birth was the week my excema
disappeared completely. Subsequently, I became pregnant, and although I am
still nursing more than once a day now, the excema is cured.
Has anyone ever heard of severe excema related to breastfeeding? The
doctors had no idea which hormone might have been going haywire. I am
worried about what will happen with my next brestfeeding experience.
Thank you,
Jessica Billowitz
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