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Cabbage Leaves, Herbs, Lecithin
Handout #24. Miscellaneous treatments.
Revised January 2005
Written by Jack Newman, MD, FRCPC. © 2005
Cabbage
leaves for engorgement | Herbs for Low Milk
Supply | Lecithin for Plugged Ducts
The following describes the use of some treatments
for breastfeeding mothers who are having various problems.
Cabbage leaves for engorgement
Severe engorgement about the third or fourth day after
the baby is born can usually be prevented by getting the baby
latched on well and drinking well from the very beginning.
(See handouts #1, Breastfeeding—Starting
Out Right and 1b, The Importance
of Skin to Skin Contact, as well as Protocol
to Increase Breastmilk Intake by the Baby. See also www.thebirthden.com/Newman.html
for videos to help use the Protocol). If you do become engorged,
please understand that engorgement diminishes within 1 or 2 days
even without any treatment. Continue to breastfeed the baby, making
sure he gets on well and nurses well. However, if you should get
engorged to the point of severe discomfort or if the baby is not
able to take the breast, cabbage leaves seem to help decrease the
engorgement more rapidly than ice packs or other treatments. If
you are unable to get the baby latched
on, start cabbage leaves, start expressing your milk and give
the expressed milk to the baby by spoon, cup, finger
feeding or eyedropper and get help quickly.
- Use green cabbage.
- Crush the cabbage leaves with a rolling pin if the leaves
do not accommodate to the shape of your breast.
- Wrap the cabbage leaves around the breast and leave on for
about 20 minutes. Twice daily is enough. It is usual to use
the cabbage leaf treatment two or three times or less. Some
will say to use the cabbage leaves after each feeding and leave
them on until they wilt. Some are concerned that such frequent
use will decrease the milk supply.
- Stop using as soon as engorgement is beginning to diminish
and you are becoming more comfortable.
- You can use acetaminophen (Tylenol™, others) with or
without codeine, ibuprofen, or other medication for pain relief.
As with almost all medications,
there is no reason to stop breastfeeding when taking analgesics.
- Ice packs also can be helpful.
- If you are one of the women who gets a large lump in the armpit
about 3 or 4 days after the baby’s birth, you can use
cabbage leaves in that area as well.
Herbs for Increasing Milk Supply
It is quite possible that herbal remedies help increase
milk supply. There are several drugs that obviously do increase
milk supply, and of course it is reasonable to assume that some
plants and herbs might contain similar pharmacological agents. Almost
every culture has some sort of herb or plant or potion to increase
milk supply. Some may work as placebos, which is fine; some may
not work at all; some may have one or more active ingredients. Some
will have active ingredients that will not increase the milk supply
but have other effects, not necessarily desirable. Note that even
herbs can have side effects, even serious ones. Natural source drugs
are still drugs, and there is no such thing as a 100% safe drug.
Luckily, as with most drugs, the baby will get only a tiny percentage
of the mother’s dose. The baby is thus extremely unlikely
to have any side effects at all from the herbs. Two herbal treatments
that seem to increase the milk supply are fenugreek and
blessed thistle, in the following dosages:
| Fenugreek: |
3 capsules 3 times a day |
| Blessed thistle: |
3 capsules 3 times a day, or 20 drops of the
tincture 3 times a day |
The tincture container states that blessed thistle
should not be taken by nursing mothers, presumably because of the
tiny amount of alcohol the mother would get. There are some preparations
of both herbs that are labelled “not for use by nursing mothers”.
Don’t worry about this; these herbs are safe for the mother
to take because so little gets into the milk. Teas also seem to
work, but to take enough to make a difference, you will be drinking
tea all day and night, since the amount of the herbs you get is
much less.
Other herbal treatments that have been used to increase
milk supply are: raspberry leaf, fennel, goat’s rue, brewer’s
yeast, alfalfa, nettle tea and many others. The effectiveness of
none of these treatments, including blessed thistle and
fenugreek, has been proved. Remember! Herbal treatments
are only part of the solution to “not enough milk” (see
protocol
to increase breastmilk intake by the baby). See also the website
www.thebirthden.com/Newman.html
for videos on how to latch a baby on, how to know the baby is getting
milk, how to use compression, how to use a lactation aid, as well
as information sheets on breastfeeding.
Lecithin
Lecithin is a food supplement that seems to help some
mothers prevent blocked ducts. It may do this by decreasing the
viscosity (stickiness) of the milk, by increasing the percentage
of polyunsaturated fatty acids in the milk. It is safe, inexpensive,
and seems to work in some cases. The dose is 1200 mg four times
a day. There is more to preventing blocked ducts than taking lecithin.
See handout #22 Blocked
Ducts and Mastitis.
For information on "all purpose nipple ointment",
gentian violet, grapefruit seed extract, vitamin B6, nifedipine,
and nitroglycerin paste, and fluconazole, see the handout Treatments
for sore nipples and sore breasts #3b, or the handouts Using
Gentian Violet and Fluconazole.
Questions?
see
my book Dr. Jack Newman's Guide to Breastfeeding (called
The
Ultimate Breastfeeding Book of Answers in the USA)
Handout #24. Miscellaneous treatments.
Revised January 2005
Written by Jack Newman, MD, FRCPC. © 2005
This
handout may be copied and distributed without further permission,
on
the condition that it is not used in any context in which
the WHO code on the marketing of breastmilk substitutes is violated