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Key management principle #1. Eliminate repetitive mechanical microtrauma for prevention and management of nipple pain and wounds

Dr Pamela Douglas26th of Jun 202417th of Sep 2024

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Optimise fit and hold to eliminate conflicting intra-oral vectors of force during breastfeeding

Studies examining the causes of lactation-related nipple pain and clinical management and clinical protocols universally agree that poor infant positioning or latch is the most common cause of nipple pain. Guidelines advise that suboptimal fit and hold should be addressed before any other treatment is instituted.1-6

Yet the way an infant fits into the maternal breast and body, which has direct impact upon the biomechanics of suckling, remains an omitted variable bias in almost all nipple pain research. Commonly taught approaches to fit and hold when problems emerge rely upon outdated biomechanical models of infant suck.7

Much of what is offered women with breastfeeding difficulty, including interventions for fit and hold, is based upon experience or opinion.8-12 You can find out about this here.

The failure of current approaches to fit and hold to effectively resolve repetitive biomechanical microtrauma during breastfeeding has lead to widespread overmedicalisation and overtreatment of both breastfeeding women and their babies, risking unintended outcomes. You can find out about this here.

  • In 2015, Kent et al reported that 42% of cases presenting to the Breastfeeding Centre of Western Australia showed lack of improvement with fit and hold and other interventions offered by IBCLCs, noting that though some studies claim to show that certain fit and hold interventions improved nipple pain outcomes,24-26 other studies could not replicate these findings.27-29 The authors observed: “Nipple pain is often attributed to suboptimal positioning and attachment of the infant although conclusive evidence is yet to be provided regarding which aspect(s) of positioning may be most important.” The IBCLCs went on to diagnose ankyloglossia and palatal anomaly in 36% of the infants of women presenting with nipple pain.3

  • Given the international evidence demonstrating overdiagnosis of ankyloglossia, and the normality of a wide variety of palatal contours, the NDC Clinical Guidelines propose NDC proposes another explanation: that scientific investigation of the elements of fit and hold which impact on maternal pain remains a research frontier.

Applying the mechanobiological model, this article proposes that although laid-back or baby-led breastfeeding methods are essential from birth, they do not integrate new knowledge about the biomechanics of infant suck in order to address the mechanical forces that cause nipple pain and damage. That is, the biological nurturing approaches are not enough to prevent breastfeeding problems for many women. You can find out about biological nurturing or laid back breastfeeding here.

The gestalt method is the only available clinical approach to fit and hold which integrates the principles of laid-back or baby-led breastfeeding with an evidence-based model of the biomechanics of infant suckling, translated into a reproducible, flexibly applied clinical intervention.38-40

Normal maternal and infant anatomies are highly variable

Human anatomy including infant tongue length, mandibular shape, and palate contour and height, and maternal breast, nipple, areola, upper and forearm length, and abdominal contour are highly variable.

Labelling, that is, medicalising or pathologizing, the wide range of normal maternal and infant anatomy disempowers and discourages breastfeeding women, and unnecessarily exacerbates parental anxiety.

In the gestalt model, it is understood that certain normal anatomic variations may increase vulnerability to the emergence of problems in the complex adaptive system of the breastfeeding mother-baby pair. This emphasises the importance of preventative and management approaches to fit and hold which optimise intra-oral breast tissue volume and eliminate breast tissue drag.38-40

Infant oral connective tissues including the lingual and labial frenula also display wide anatomic variability which are currently pathologized and inappropriately treated with either surgery or courses of bodywork therapy.

  • The normal spectrum of labial frenula anatomy is not linked with breastfeeding problems, and should not be pathologised as restricted or ‘tied’.41-43

  • There is no anatomic or functional basis for the diagnosis of posterior tongue-tie.44-46

The latter two diagnoses are examples of overmedicalisation of breastfeeding problems, resulting in exponential increase in unnecessary infant oral surgery and bodywork exercises.14 18 19 22 23 47-49 Studies which claim to show benefits of frenotomy for diagnoses of posterior or upper lip ties are methodologically flawed, demonstrating bias.50 51

Unintended consequences of frenotomy include infant pain, haemorrhage, worsened feeding, oral aversion, damage to lingual nerve branches altering tongue sensation, sublingual mucocoele, and weight loss.52-56

The gestalt model proposes that behaviours during breastfeeding of fussing, back-arching, pulling off the breast and ‘shallow latch’ are all signs of suboptimal fit and hold and are not attributable to infant oral connective tissue restrictions, neurological weakness or motor dyscoordination.38-40 57

Maternal anatomic variation and nipple pain

Certain poorly defined anatomic variations have been shown in preliminary studies to have links with breastfeeding problems, including nipple pain.

  • A 2009 Iranian study showed that 50 newborns of mothers with flat nipple, inverted nipple, large breasts and/or large nipples had a mean decrease in weight by day seven compared to 50 newborns whose mothers did not have these breast variations.58

  • A 2013 Thai study of 449 women showed that nipple lengths of less than 7 millimetres were associated with less success in bringing baby to the breast and initiating breastfeeding in the first 24 hours, but no conclusions about breastfeeding success or capacity to latch after the first day could be drawn.59

  • In 2020, Ventura et all studied 119 women in a US breastfeeding centre, showing that various combinations of wider, longer nipples and denser areolas were associated with difficulty latching, sore nipples, low milk supply, and slow infant weight gain.60 But there is no reliably established link between nipple shape and breastfeeding failure.

This paper proposes that multiple morphological factors interact with multiple modifiable biomechanical factors to determine an infant’s capacity to transfer milk efficiently from his or her mother’s breast, without causing her pain. The gestalt model applies a complexity science perspective to clinical breastfeeding support, which aims to optimize intra-oral breast tissue volume across the wide diversity of maternal and infant anatomies. In this way, anatomic and other vulnerabilities within the complex adaptive system of the mother-baby pair are compensated for, because the protective effect of multiple other factors is optimised.38-40 57

Eliminate conflicting vectors of force during mechanical milk removal

Conflicting vectors of force (breast tissue drag) applied to the nipple during pumping may cause persistent nipple pain and damage.

Hands-free mechanical milk removal, with pump flanges supported in an elastic band, may increase the risk of breast tissue drag and epithelial damage. Mechanical milk removal may also result in an erythematous, slightly swollen ring rash on the areola, a sign that the areola is repetitively drawn into the flange and exposed to friction. Pain-free, thickened discoloration and hyperkeratosis of the nipple face, caused by repetitive ischemia, may result from exclusive pumping.

The following strategies aim to minimise damage to nipple-areolar complex skin and nipple stroma during mechanical milk removal.

• Ensure nipple moves freely without rubbing on inside of the flange tunnel, and that minimal areola is drawn up into the tunnel;

• Invite a woman to experiment between different sized flanges;

• Invite her to experiment with different flange options e.g. Pumpin’ Pals or Milkdrop cushions;

• Hand express one breast while pumping the other, and change over the next time;

• Pump on lowest effective vacuum setting and for short periods of time e.g. 10 minutes, because frequent short pumping is more effective in milk removal and milk generation than less often, longer periods;63

• Don’t use hands-free pumping, in order to eliminate breast tissue drag which conflicts with the direction of the vacuum;

• Apply olive oil as lubricant.

References

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