How Your Milk Is Made
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- How Your Milk Is Made
Pumping also tells your body to make milk.
The more milk your baby drinks, or the more milk you express, the more milk your body will make.
The area of darker-colored skin on the breast around the nipple
The small, raised area in the center of the areola
Small, grapelike sacs
A cluster of alveoli
Tubes that carry milk to the nipple
The parts of the breast that make milk; each lobe contains alveoli and milk ducts
The act of breastfeeding – your baby suckling at your breast – or expressing milk, in general, signals the brain to release hormones. These hormones are called prolactin and oxytocin. Prolactin causes your alveoli to make breastmilk. Oxytocin causes small muscles around the alveoli to squeeze milk out through the milk ducts. Prolactin levels are naturally higher in the middle of the night and early morning hours each day. Prolactin levels will progressively drop throughout the day but can be kept at a higher level with frequent milk removal.
This passing of the milk down the ducts is called the “let-down” reflex.
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Side-Lying Hold
This hold is useful when:
Cross-Cradle Hold
This hold is useful when:
Clutch or “Football” Hold
This hold is useful when:
Cradle Hold
This hold is useful when:
Laid-Back Hold
This hold is useful when: