I Stopped Breastfeeding. Can You Start Again Once Your Milk Has Dried Up?

If you've stopped breastfeeding but wish to start again, it can be a relief to know that relactation is possible. It isn't an easy process and could require a long time and a lot of work, but the joy of knowing that you are providing your baby with the healthiest food possible can make the extra effort well worth it.

Bridget Coila
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Milk Blisters When Not Breastfeeding

A milk blister – also called a “bleb” or “nipple blister” -- can develop even if you are not breastfeeding. As long as your breasts contain milk, a milk blister can develop. Milk blisters can be painful and upsetting, especially if symptoms last for a long period.

Rose Erickson
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Blisters on Nipples From Breast-Feeding

Breast-feeding isn't supposed to hurt, but sometimes a nursing mother develops painful blisters on her nipples. The appearance and treatment of these sores depends on the underlying cause, but they don't need to hamper the breast-feeding relationship.

Bridget Coila
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How to Heal Blisters on the Breasts From Pumping

Pumping breast milk may be necessary if you plan to return to work or if you will be away from your baby for another reason. Unfortunately, like breastfeeding, pumping can cause blisters and pain, especially in the beginning. There are two types of blisters that commonly develop on the nipples from pumping.

Sandra Ketcham
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Breastfeeding & Having Menstrual Pain

Cramping and bleeding of the uterus can happen to any woman postpartum, no matter how many pregnancies she has had. Menstrual-like pain can be intense and make it difficult to perform daily tasks and care for your newborn. This makes it imperative to understand how to treat menstrual-like pain due to breastfeeding.

Rose Erickson
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Breastfeeding & Decrease in Bowel Movements

Health organizations and the medical community encourage women to breastfeed for good reason. It provides proper nutrition for babies, in addition to lowering their risk for sudden infant death syndrome and other health conditions.

Rachel Morgan
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Breastfeeding and Constipation in an Infant

Nearly every parent frets about their baby’s bowel movements, or lack thereof. A decrease in the number of bowel movements often indicates constipation in children and adults, so parents naturally despair if their baby does not have a dirty diaper each day.

Erin Thacker
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Cooking With Wine and Breastfeeding

If wine was a staple in your prepregnancy kitchen, you’re probably itching to uncork a bottle during those first few exhausting months of new motherhood.

Krista Sheehan
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My Nipple Hurts From a Teething Baby

Most babies begin to teethe around three to six months of age, with their first two teeth erupting before the seventh month. It’s not unusual for some babies to get their first teeth later, at one year of age or older. For breastfeeding moms, teething can be a difficult time.

Amber Canaan
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Why Do Nipples Invert After Breastfeeding?

As many as 2 percent of American women have at least one inverted nipple, according to Southern California Nipple and Areola Correction. Most women with an inverted nipple were born with a congenital defect, inherited at birth.

Lynn Hetzler
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Colostrum and the Stages of Breast Milk

Breast milk is one of the best things that a new mother can offer her newborn. It provides your newborn with basic nutrition during the first months of life, which will set the pace for optimum health throughout life.

Heather Hitchcock
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Laxatives & Breastfeeding

Constipation -- the passage of hard, dry stools less than three times a week - often plagues women during pregnancy and after giving birth. If you're breastfeeding, you might hesitate to take any type of laxatives which might pass through breast milk to your baby.

Heather Hitchcock
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