Guest guest Posted December 31, 2000 Report Share Posted December 31, 2000 -----Original Message-----From: ParfumGigi@... <ParfumGigi@...>SBI-Talkegroups <SBI-Talkegroups>Cc: SBIPrayerForumegroups <SBIPrayerForumegroups>; MAM-NSIF@... <MAM-NSIF@...>; Dowlied@... <Dowlied@...>; implants@... <implants@...>; PEEPERLY@... <PEEPERLY@...>; kkj@... <kkj@...>; Boone1289@... <Boone1289@...>; SLIM2RB@... <SLIM2RB@...>; RAve456201@... <RAve456201@...>; Gimfl@... <Gimfl@...>; weedsworld@... <weedsworld@...>; mtbears@... <mtbears@...>; Lv7dove7@... <Lv7dove7@...>; Sea2322@... <Sea2322@...>; UBCDan@... <UBCDan@...>; LPar902210@... <LPar902210@...>; Cow22girl@... <Cow22girl@...>; Bsiemer@... <Bsiemer@...>; lorenn@... <lorenn@...>; Lynda <coss1@...>; lillian45usa@... <lillian45usa@...>; nye822@... <nye822@...>; myrlj@... <myrlj@...>; Pamracey@... <Pamracey@...>; spudnik@... <spudnik@...>; wonbyone@... <wonbyone@...>; ppyron@... <ppyron@...>; sharynn2@... <sharynn2@...>; Gofer <gofer@...>; HORSRASER2@... <HORSRASER2@...>; NEspina@... <NEspina@...>; Fuchsmorrissey@... <Fuchsmorrissey@...>; jwootton@... <jwootton@...>; jessi <OurOneLife@...>; rrmayeaux1@... <rrmayeaux1@...>; Docmayeaux@... <Docmayeaux@...>; janmarh@... <janmarh@...>; turnerdl@... <turnerdl@...>; sweetcarolinelv@... <sweetcarolinelv@...>; devans@... <devans@...>Date: Sunday, December 31, 2000 4:19 PMSubject: From:CPR4WandF..Happy New Year & a new article thats interesting gigi* Subj: Happy New Year and a new article Date: 12/31/00 3:18:34 PM Central Standard Time From: CPR4WandF SOSalines BCC: ParfumGigi Please pass this on, to the other individuals..Thank You...gigi/ Dear Friends, This is just a short note to wish you all a Happy New Year and to encourage you all to hang in there. This has been a discouraging year for many women with implants, but I believe that overall, there is more awareness of the risks of implants than there was a year ago. With your help, we will continue to provide the most accurate, unbiased information available, on a wide range of women's health issues, for free to anyone who wants it. Several women have told us that they are having difficulty getting disability payments that could help them while they are too ill to work. If you know anyone who needs that kind of information, especially about SSDI or other government programs, please let us know. We will try to provide it on our website in the near future. On that note, here is a new article that is in our website's breast implant section and will also be included in our women's health section. If the footnotes don't come out right here, check out the website instead. Best wishes to you and your loved ones, Zuckerman, Ph.D. Executive Director National Center for Policy Research for Women and Families http://www.cpr4womenandfamilies.org/ December 2000 Breast Implant Surgery Likely to Cause Breastfeeding Problems By Lieberman, Ph.D. According to the Institute of Medicine (IOM), any kind of breast surgery, including breast implant surgery, makes it at least three times more likely that a woman trying to breastfeed will have an inadequate milk supply (lactation insufficiency).1 The IOM based that conclusion on a number of studies of women with breast implants or other breast surgery. A description of those studies follows. In a study conducted by Dr. nne Neifert and colleagues at the University of Colorado School of Medicine, women who had breast surgery were three times more likely to have lactation insufficiency than those that did not have breast surgery.2 The doctors compared the rate of weight gain of breastfed infants born to mothers who either did or did not have previous breast surgery. Mothers whose babies did not gain at least one ounce per day, or who required supplemental feedings with formula, were deemed to have lactation insufficiency. Interestingly, the women who had breast surgery through an incision in the nipple area (periareolar incision) had even higher rates of problems. Those women were five times more likely to have insufficient milk compared to women without breast surgery.3 In a study by Hurst, RN, MSN, from Texas Children's Hospital, 64% of women with breast implants had lactation insufficiency, compared to 7% of women without implants.4 Periareolar incision was most likely to cause a problem, but other incisions also made it significantly more difficult for women to nurse. A study by Dr. Sara Strom and others at the University of Texas M.D. Cancer Center looked at nursing rates among 46 new mothers who had previously received saline-filled breast implants.5 Of those women, 28 chose to breastfeed their baby, but 11 (39%) had problems breastfeeding. Eight of those 11 had problems that they attributed to their breast implant. Seven out of eight of those women received their implant through a periareolar incision. Although this study did not have a group of non-implanted women to serve as a control, it is consistent with other studies that show that women with implants have a high rate of problems breastfeeding. Having breast implants also can deter women from attempting to breastfeed, according to Strom's study. When asked about the main reason that they didn't attempt to breastfeed their babies, implanted women who chose not to breastfeed said they feared lactation insufficiency and other complications due to the implants. It is not completely clear why breast implants cause problems with breastfeeding. One possibility is that the surgery may damage the milk-producing ducts. That is especially likely if the implants are inserted through a periareolar incision. Another possibility is that the breast implant may be putting pressure on the breast tissue, which could damage the breast tissue, and thereby diminish milk production. At this point it is impossible to determine whether the breastfeeding problems that implanted women have are due to the implant or the surgery. Either way, the end result is the same - women who have breast implants, especially if they have an incision around the nipple, are less likely to be able to breastfeed. In addition to the above problems which were revealed in empirical studies, there have been a number of case reports of women with breast implants having abnormal lactation or other breast problems such as mastitis (infection of the breast, which is usually caused by a bacterial infection), galactorrhea (breast milk production by a woman who is not pregnant and has not just given birth), or galactocele (a milk-filled tumor in a blocked breast milk duct) formation. 6,7,8,9,10,11 It is impossible to determine how often those complications occur after breast implants, because there has never been a research study. There is consensus in the medical and public health community that breast milk provides essential nutrition for babies, in addition to improving their immune responses to infections. Breastfed babies have been shown to be less likely to have gastrointestinal disease, respiratory ailments and asthma, ear infections, and allergies. Some researchers believe that breastfeeding provides protection against obesity, arteriosclerosis, celiac disease, and other metabolic disorders. Other studies have shown that breastfeeding is beneficial to the mother as well, helping to create a psychological bond between mother and infant, aiding postpartum recovery, and helping mothers to more quickly return to their pre-pregnancy weight. It is therefore of considerable concern that breast implants - or the surgery to get them - may make it more difficult for women to breastfeed successfully. References: 1 National Academy of Sciences Institute of Medicine, Safety of Silicone Breast Implants, National Academy Press, Washington, D.C., 1999, p. 197. 2 Neifert, M., DeMarzo, S., Seacat, J., Young, D., Leff, M., Orleans, M., The Influence of Breast Surgery, Breast Appearance, and Pregnancy-Induced Breast Changes on Lactation Sufficiency as Measured by Infant Weight Gain, Birth, 1990; 17: 31-38. 3 Of the 22 women who had breast surgery, only five had breast augmentation with breast implants. 4 Hurst, N.M., Lactation After Augmentation Mammoplasty, Obstetrics & Gynecology, 1996; 87: 30-34. 5 Strom, S.S., Baldwin, B.J., Sigurdson, A.J., Schusterman, M.A., Cosmetic Saline Breast Implants: A Survey of Satisfaction, Breast-Feeding Experience, Cancer Screening, and Health, Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, 1997; 100: 1553-1557. 6 Deloach, E.D., Lord, S.A., Ruf, L.E., Unilateral Galactocele Following Augmentation Mammoplasty, ls of Plastic Surgery, 1994; 33: 68-71. 7 Hartley, J.H., Schatten, W.E., Postoperative Complications of Lactation after Augmentation Mammaplasty, Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, 1971; 47: 150-153. 8 , P.E., Hanson, K.D., Acute Puerperal Mastitis in the Augmented Breast, Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, 1996; 98: 723-725. 9Luhan, J.E., Giant Galactoceles, One Month after Bilateral Augmentation Mammoplasty, Abdominoplasty, and Tubal Ligation: Case Study, Aesthetic Plastic Surgery, 1979; 3: 161-164. 10 Mason, T.C., Hyperprolactinemia and Galactorrhea Associated with Mammary Prostheses and Unresponsive to Bromocriptine: A Case Report, Journal of Reproductive Medicine, 1991; 36: 541-2. 11 Menendez-Graino, F., Pena Fernandez, C., Burrieza, P.I., Galactorrhea after Reduction Mammaplasty, Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, 1990; 85: 645-646. 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