Breastfeeding Does Not Create Sagging Breasts; Study Throws Out Old Wives' Tale
Sunday, October 28, 2007
Breastfeeding Does Not Create
Sagging Breasts; Study Throws Out Old Wives'
Tale
Myth Dispelled at American
Society of Plastic Surgeons Annual
Meeting
For
Immediate Release: October 28, 2007
“Many women
who come in for breast surgery tell us their
breasts are sagging, drooping or
are less full because they breastfed,” said
Brian Rinker, MD,
ASPS Member Surgeon and study author.
“Although the amount of sagging in the
breasts appears to increase with each
pregnancy, we’ve found that breastfeeding
does not worsen the
effect.”
The study
examined 93 women who were pregnant one or
more times prior to having cosmetic
breast surgery. Fifty-eight percent of
patients reported breastfeeding one or
more of their children. The duration of
breastfeeding ranged from 2 to 25
months, with an average of nine months.
Fifty-five percent of respondents
reported an adverse change in the shape of
their breasts following
pregnancy.
As the first
study to examine what impacts breast shape in
connection to pregnancy, plastic
surgeons found that a history of
breastfeeding, the number of children
breastfed, the duration of each child’s
breastfeeding, or the amount of weight
gained during pregnancy were not significant
predictors for losing breast
shape. However, body mass index (BMI), the
number of pregnancies, a larger
pre-pregnancy bra size, smoking history, and
age were significant risk factors
for an increased degree of breast
sagging.
Nearly 104,000
women had breast lifts in 2006, up 96 percent
since 2000, according to the
ASPS. In addition, more than 329,000 women had
breast augmentation, making it
the top surgical cosmetic procedure in
2006.
“Women may be
reluctant to breastfeed because of this
unfounded myth that doing so means the
end of youthful breasts,” said Dr. Rinker.
“Now, expectant mothers can relax
knowing breastfeeding does not change the
appearance of their
breasts.”
Breast milk
provides indisputable health benefits to
infants. Research has shown breastfed
infants have improved general health, growth
and development as well as a lower
risk of many acute and chronic illnesses than
bottle-fed infants.
