
Introduction
The best treatment of sore nipples is prevention. The best prevention is
latching the baby on properly from the first day.Sore nipples are usually due to one or both of two causes. Either the baby is not
positioned and latched properly, or the baby is not suckling properly, or both. Incidentally,
babies learn to suck properly by getting milk from the breast when they are latched on
well. (They learn by doing). Fungal infection (due to Candida albicans), may also
cause sore nipples. The soreness caused by poor latching and ineffective suckle hurts most
as you latch the baby on and usually improves as the baby nurses. The pain from the fungal
infection goes on throughout the feed and may continue even after the feed is over. Women
describe knifelike pain from the first two causes. The pain of the fungal infection is
often described as burning, but may not have this character. Sudden, unexplained onset
of nipple pain when feedings had previously been painless is a tipoff that the pain may be
due to a yeast infection, but the pain may come on gradually or may be superimposed on
pain due to other causes. Cracks may be due to a yeast infection.
Proper Positioning and Latching
It is not uncommon for women to experience difficulty positioning and latching
the baby on. Proper positioning facilitates a good latch and good latching reduces the
baby's chances of becoming "gassy", and also allows the baby to control the flow
of milk. Thus, poor latching may also result in the baby not gaining adequately, or
feeding frequently, or being colicky (handout #2 "Colic in the Breastfed Baby).
PositioningFor the purposes of explanation, let us
assume that you are feeding on the left breast.
Good positioning facilitates a good latch. A lot of what follows under latching
comes automatically if the baby is well positioned in the first place.
At first, it may be easiest to use the cross cradle hold to position your
baby for latching on. Hold the baby in your right arm, the web between your thumb and
index finger behind the nape of his neck (not behind his head) with your fingers
(except for the thumb) supporting the baby's face from underneath, and your forearm
supporting his back and buttocks. Hold the baby's buttocks between your chest and your
forearmthis should give you good control. The baby should be almost horizontal
across your body and should be turned so that his chest, belly and thighs are against you
with a slight tilt so the baby can look at you. Hold the breast with your left hand, with
the thumb on top and the other fingers underneath, fairly far back from the nipple and
areola.
The baby should be approaching the breast with the head just slightly tilted
backwards. The nipple then automatically points to the roof of the baby's mouth. (See
handout on positioning and latching on)
Latching
- Now, get the baby to open up his mouth wide. The way to do this is to run your
nipple, still pointing to the roof of the baby's mouth, along the baby's mouth, very
lightly, from one corner of the mouth to the other. Or you can run the baby along your
nipple, something some mothers find easier. Wait for the baby to open up as if yawning.
WAIT FOR HIM. As you bring the baby toward the breast, his chin should touch
your breast first.
- When the baby opens up his mouth, use the arm that is holding him to bring him onto the
breast. Don't worry about the baby's breathing. If he is properly positioned and latched
on, he will breathe without any problem. If he cannot breathe, he will pull away from the
breast. Don't be afraid to be vigorous.
- If the nipple still hurts, use your index finger to pull down on the baby's chin in
order to bring the lower lip out. You may have to do this for the duration of the feed,
but this is usually not necessary.
- The same principles apply whether you are sitting or lying down with the baby or using
the football hold. Get the baby to open wide, don't let the baby latch onto the nipple,
but get as much of the areola (brown part of breast) into the mouth as possible (not
necessarily the whole areola).
- There is no "normal" length of feeding time. If you have questions, call the
clinic.
- A baby properly latched on will be covering more of the areola with his lower lip than
with the upper lip.
Improving the baby's suckle
The baby learns to suckle properly by nursing and by getting milk into his
mouth. The baby's suckle may be made ineffective or not appropriate for breastfeeding by
the early use of artificial nipples or from poor latching on from the beginning. Some
babies just seem to take their time developing an effective suckle. Suck training and/or
finger feeding (handout #8 Finger Feeding) may help.
"My nipple turns white after the baby comes off the breast"
The pain associated with this blanching of the nipple is frequently described
by mothers as "burning", but generally begins only after the feeding is over. It
may last several minutes or more, after which the nipple returns to its normal colour, but
then a new pain develops which is usually described by mothers as "throbbing".
The throbbing part of the pain may last for seconds or minutes and may even blanch again.
The cause would seem to be a spasm of the blood vessels in the nipple (when the nipple is
white), followed by relaxation of these blood vessels (when the nipple returns to its
normal colour). Sometimes this pain continues even after the nipple pain during the
feeding no longer is a problem, so that the mother has pain only after the feeding, but
not during it. What can be done?
- Pay careful attention to getting the baby to latch onto the breast properly. This type
of pain is almost always associated with, and probably caused by whatever is causing your
pain during the feeding. The best treatment is the treatment of the other causes of nipple
pain.
- Heat (hot washcloth, hot water bottle, hair dryer) applied to the nipple immediately
after nursing may prevent or decrease the reaction. Dry heat is usually better than wet
heat, because wet heat may cause further damage to the nipples.
- On occasion, we have had to use a medicated paste (nitroglycerine) or an oral medication
(nifedipine) to prevent this type of reaction.
This article may
be copied and distributed without further permission
Handout #3 Sore nipples. Revised January 1998
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About the
Author
JACK NEWMAN
graduated from the University of Toronto medical school as a pediatrician in 1970. He
started the first hospital-based breastfeeding clinic in Canada in 1984 at Toronto's
Hospital for Sick Children. He has been a consultant with UNICEF for the Baby Friendly
Hospital Initiative in Africa, and has published articles on the subject of breastfeeding
in Scientific American and several medical journals. Dr. Newman has practiced as a
physician in Canada, New Zealand, and South Africa.
If you would like to contact Dr. Newman, you can mail him at: newman@globalserve.net
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