MotherNature  
Looking for Natural Remedies?
SAVE 15% at MotherNature.com today!
Click here for details.
Home Vitamins Minerals Supplements Herbs Home & Grocery Diet & Fitness Body & Bath
FREE Standard Shipping on orders over $49! (Click for details)
View Cart Check Out Quick ReOrder Your Account Help Center

Search


Ways To Shop



Chapter List For:
New Choices in Natural Healing:
  1. The Most Natural of Remedies
  2. How to Use
  3. Acupressure
  4. The Many Flavors
  5. Shorthand for the Meridians
  6. Five Minute Workout
  7. Aromatherapy
  8. Some Words Of Caution
  9. Essential Oils for Beginers
  10. Ayurveda
  11. How to Make Ghee
  12. Vata Pitta Kappa
  13. Whats Your Dosha
  14. The Beef About Meet
  15. Flower Remedy Essence Therapy
  16. A Caution for Pregnant Women
  17. Food Therapy
  18. Detoxing Your Ills
  19. Whats Cooking with Your Nutrients
  20. Food Sensitivity
  21. Herbal Therapy
  22. The Scientific Evidence on Herbs
  23. A Road Map for Shoppers
  24. Hazardous Herbs
  25. Homeopathy
  26. Five Questions
  27. Homeopatic First Aid
  28. Making the Most of Your Remedy
  29. Hydrotherapy
  30. How to Perform An Enema
  31. Hydrotherapy at Home
  32. Taking Care With Hydrotherapy
  33. Imagery
  34. What Do You Say to a Naked Leprechaun
  35. Making the Most of Your Images
  36. Juice Therapy
  37. Choose Your Weapon
  38. Ready Set Juice
  39. Massage
  40. Hands Off
  41. Getting Rubbed Right
  42. Reflexology
  43. Your Reflexology Session
  44. Relaxation and Meditation
  45. Five Relaxation Enhancers
  46. Tape Your Way to Relaxation
  47. Sound Therapy
  48. Hum Yourself to Health
  49. Sailing Away to Key Largo
  50. Turning Down the Volume of Life
  51. Vitamin and Mineral Therapy
  52. Watch What Youre Taking
  53. Getting What You Need
  54. Yoga
  55. Finding a Class Act
  56. Acne
  57. Allergies
  58. Anemia
  59. Anger
  60. Angina
  61. Anxiety
  62. Arthritis
  63. Asthma
  64. Athletes Foot
  65. Backche
  66. Bad Breath
  67. Bites and Stings
  68. Boils
  69. Breastfeeding Problem
  70. Brittle Nail
  71. Bronchitis
  72. Bruises
  73. Burnout
  74. Burns
  75. Bursitis and Tendinitis
  76. Caffeine Dependency
  77. Caluses and Corns
  78. Canker Sores
  79. Cataracts
  80. Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
  81. Colds
  82. Cold Sores
  83. Conjunctivities
  84. Constipation
  85. Coughing
  86. Cuts Scrapes and Scratches
  87. Dandruff
  88. Depression
  89. Dermatitis and Eczema
  90. Diabetes
  91. Diarrhea
  92. Diverticlar Disease
  93. Dizziness
  94. Drowsiness
  95. Dry Hair and Skin
  96. Earache
  97. Earwax
  98. Eating Disorder
  99. Endometriosis
  100. Eyestrain
  101. Fatigue
  102. Fever
  103. Fibrocystic Breast Disease
  104. Fibromyalgia
  105. Flatulence
  106. Flu
  107. Food Allergies
  108. Food Cravings
  109. Food Poisoning
  110. Foot Odor
  111. Foot Pain
  112. Frostbite
  113. Gallstones
  114. Genital Herpes
  115. Gingivitis
  116. Glaucoma
  117. Gout
  118. Grief
  119. Hair Loss
  120. Hangover
  121. Headache
  122. Hearing Problem
  123. Heartburn
  124. Heart Disease
  125. Heart Palpitation
  126. Heat Rush
  127. Heel Spurs
  128. Hemorrhoids
  129. Hernia
  130. Hiccups
  131. High Blood Pressure
  132. High Cholesterol
  133. Hyperventilation
  134. Impotence
  135. Incontinence
  136. Indigestion
  137. Infertility
  138. Ingrown Toenails
  139. Inhibited Sexual Desire
  140. Insomnia
  141. Intercourse Pain
  142. Irritability
  143. Irritable Bowel Syndrome
  144. Jealousy
  145. Jet Lag
  146. Jock Itch
  147. Joint Pain
  148. Kidney Stones
  149. Lactose Introlerance
  150. Laryngitis
  151. Leg Cramp
  152. Lyme Disease
  153. Memory Problems
  154. Menopause Problems
  155. Menstrual Problems
  156. Migraines
  157. Mood Swings
  158. Motion Sickness
  159. Muscle Cramps and Pain
  160. Nausea and Vomiting
  161. Neck Pain
  162. Night Blindness
  163. Nightmares
  164. Oily Hair and Sceen
  165. Osteoporosis
  166. Overweight
  167. Panick Attacks
  168. Passive Smoking
  169. Phlebitis
  170. Phobias
  171. Poor Body Image
  172. Postnasal Drip
  173. Post Traumatic Stress
  174. Posture Problems
  175. Pregnancy Problems
  176. Premature Ejaculation
  177. Premenstrual Syndromee
  178. Prostate Problems
  179. Psoriases
  180. Rashes
  181. Raynauds Disease
  182. Repetitive Strain Injures
  183. Restless Legs Syndrome
  184. Rosacea
  185. Scarring
  186. Sciatica
  187. Shingles
  188. Shinsplints
  189. Shyness
  190. Sinus Problems
  191. Sleep Apnea
  192. Smoking
  193. Sore Throat
  194. Sprains
  195. Stomachache
  196. Stress
  197. Stuttering
  198. Substance Abuse
  199. Sunburn
  200. Surgical Preparation and Recov
  201. Sweating Exessively
  202. Temporomandibular Joint Disorder
  203. Tinnitus
  204. Toothache
  205. Tooth Grinding
  206. Type A Personality
  207. Ulcers
  208. Urinary Tract Infection
  209. Vaginitis
  210. Varicose Venis
  211. Vision Problems
  212. Warts
  213. Water Retention
  214. Wrinkles
  215. Yeast Infections
  216. Resources
  217. Common Degrees in Alternative Medicine
  218. Credits
From the Rodale book, New Choices in Natural Healing:
Edit id 2045

Breastfeeding Problem


Previous Chapter Boils
Next Chapter High Cholesterol


Breastfeeding Problems

When things go right, breastfeeding can do a lot for a mother and child. The baby gets top-quality, natural nutrition. The mother bonds with her child in a very intimate way. And they’re both healthier.

Studies show that breastfeeding can boost a baby’s immune system and protect against future diseases. For the mom, it conserves the body’s iron stores and helps protect against bone loss and breast cancer. And there are even more immediate advantages: After a pregnancy, it can help a mother’s uterus return to normal size more quickly and help her get down to her prepregnancy weight faster.

Of course, things don’t always go right. Nipples can get sore. Milk ducts can become plugged. Breasts can produce too much or too little milk. The natural remedies in this chapter—in conjunction with medical care and used with the approval of your doctor—may provide relief from breastfeeding problems, according to some health professionals.

See Your Medical Doctor When...
  • Your breasts become inflamed.
  • You develop flulike symptoms, including a fever, when trying to breastfeed.

Acupressure

For lactation problems, gradually press both St 16 points on your upper chest for a couple of minutes three times a day, recommends Michael Reed Gach, Ph.D., director of the Acupressure Institute in Berkeley, California, and author of Acupressure’s Potent Points. The points are located directly above the breast tissue in line with the nipples, between the third and fourth ribs. (For help in locating these points, refer to the illustration on page 564.)

Aromatherapy

Start each day by slowly sipping an eight-ounce glass of water spiked with a drop of fennel essential oil, recommends San Francisco herbalist Jeanne Rose, chairperson of the National Association for Holistic Aromatherapy and author of Aromatherapy: Applications and Inhalations. “At night, after nursing, you can also rub the breasts with a fennel massage oil,” says Rose. “Use one drop of fennel oil in a teaspoon of olive oil.” (Olive oil is available in most health food stores.)

For information on preparing and administering essential oils, including cautions about their use, see page 19. For information on purchasing essential oils, refer to the resource list on page 633.

Ayurveda

If your breast milk is scanty, try this mixture of almond milk and herbs, says Vasant Lad, B.A.M.S., M.A.Sc., director of the Ayurvedic Institute in Albuquerque, New Mexico. He says to soak ten shelled almonds in water overnight. Then peel them, put them in a blender, add a cup of hot water or hot milk and puree them. Pour the almond milk into a glass and stir in a pinch each of gin ger powder, cardamom and saffron and a teaspoon of date sugar (available in most health food stores) or honey. Dr. Lad says to drink this twice a day, morning and evening, to help strengthen the quality and quantity of your breast milk.

If you have too much milk, Dr. Lad recommends pumping the excess and massaging painful breasts as needed with warm castor oil. He also suggests that women with pitta or kapha doshas drink three to four cups of pomegranate juice daily to regulate lactation. (Vata women should avoid pomegranate juice, says Dr. Lad, since it can aggravate that dosha.) Pomegranate juice is available in most health food stores. (For more information about the doshas of Ayurveda, see “All about Vata, Pitta and Kapha” on page 28.)

If a baby is not nursing well, he may be allergic to something the mother is eating, Dr. Lad says. All nursing mothers should avoid eating meats, canned foods and hot, spicy dishes, says Dr. Lad. “Avoid beans, too,” he advises. “They cause colic.” The best diet for a nursing mother is a simple, bland vegetarian menu. Dr. Lad adds that you can also “take the baby to an Ayurvedic practitioner, find out the baby’s prakruti and follow that diet.” (For more information on prakruti, see page 30.)

Flower Remedy/Essence Therapy

Women who have difficulty breastfeeding may be experiencing some ambivalence about the process, says Patricia Kaminski, co-director of the Flower Essence Society, a Nevada City, California, organization that studies and promotes the therapeutic use of flower remedies/essences.

“Women who find breastfeeding embarrassing or repulsive on some deep level may benefit from the essence of Alpine Lily,” she says. “Mariposa Lily is good for women who are just very anxious and need a little help bonding with their babies.”

For mothers whose milk is insufficient, the essence Mugwort may stimulate the flow, adds Kaminski.

Flower essences are available in some health food stores and through mail order (refer to the resource list on page 635). For information on preparing and administering flower essences, see page 37.

Food Therapy

Eat more nuts, seeds and whole grains, because they’re rich in essential fatty acids and the vitamins and minerals that can relieve the pain of breastfeeding problems, says Julian Whitaker, M.D., founder and president of the Whitaker Wellness Center in Newport Beach, California. “You might also want to avoid cruciferous vegetables,” he says. “Some babies won’t drink milk from mothers who eat a lot of cruciferous vegetables.”

Herbal Therapy

Fennel is a well-known folk remedy that can help first-time mothers increase their milk production, says San Francisco herbalist Jeanne Rose, author of Jeanne Rose’s Modern Herbal and several other herb books. “We don’t really know why it works—it may stimulate hormone production—but it does help get the milk flowing.” She recommends starting each day by drinking a cup of fennel seed tea. You can make the tea yourself, she says, by simmering one teaspoon of fennel seeds in one cup of hot water for three to ten minutes. Strain out the seeds, then drink a cup of the tea (first letting it cool to a drinkable temperature, of course).

Homeopathy

If you’re eating right and getting enough rest but you’re still having difficulties producing milk, worry, anxiety and stress may be compounding your dilemma, according to Maesimund Panos, M.D., a homeopathic physician in Tipp City, Ohio, and co-author with Jane Heimlich of Homeopathic Medicine at Home. To relieve stress-related breastfeeding problems, Dr. Panos advises taking two tablets of ignatia 6X three times a day until your milk production begins to increase. If stress isn’t a problem, she suggests trying Calcarea phosphorica in the same dosage. You should notice a boost in your output in a few days, she says.

If you suspect that you have a plugged milk duct or an inflamed breast, see your doctor. But you can also try Phytolacca 6X three or four times a day until you begin to notice improvement, Dr. Panos says.

Ignatia, Calcarea phosphorica and Phytolacca can be purchased in many health food stores. To purchase homeopathic remedies by mail, refer to the resource list on page 637.

Imagery

Think about picking up your baby and cuddling him in your arms. Then picture your child easily taking hold of one of your breasts and putting enough of the nipple in his mouth so that it’s comfortable. See your baby sucking firmly without any problems. Envision your breast milk spurting into your child’s mouth with every suck. Look into your baby’s eyes and see absolute contentment, says Barbara L. Rees, R.N., Ph.D., an imagery expert and professor of nursing at the University of New Mexico College of Nursing in Albuquerque. She suggests doing this exercise for about 10 to 15 minutes every day.

Massage

A three-part massage of the breasts can help relieve soreness and engorgement, says Elaine Stillerman, L.M.T., a New York City massage therapist and author of Mother Massage: A Handbook for Relieving the Discomforts of Pregnancy. Here’s how she says to do the massage: Rub a small amount of massage oil or cream between both hands to warm it. Then rub either one or both breasts. Make large circles around the outside of the breast, but avoid directly touching your nipple or areola. Do this for several minutes. Now massage one breast at a time, using the fingertips of one hand to make small circles all around the outside of the breast. After several minutes, repeat the same stroke on the other breast. Then place both hands flat on either side of the areola, with your thumbs pointing toward your head and your fingers pointing toward your waist. Slowly slide your hands away from the areola until you reach the edge of the breast. Be sure to avoid the sensitive areola region. Turn your hands slightly to cover a different portion of the breast and repeat. Do this for one to two minutes, then massage the other breast. Stillerman recommends massaging yourself once a day when your breasts are sore or engorged.

Vitamin and Mineral Therapy

To heal nipples that are sore from breastfeeding, you can prick a vitamin E capsule with a pin and rub the liquid over tender areas, suggests Julian Whitaker, M.D., founder and president of the Whitaker Wellness Center in Newport Beach, California. “It’s very soothing, and the vitamin helps heal any skin cracking you may have.” Clean off any excess liquid vitamin E before the next feeding.

Previous Chapter Boils
Next Chapter High Cholesterol

Home | Shop | Library | About Us | Security & Privacy Policy
Ordering Help Shipping & Returns Have Questions? Other Services
NexTag Seller PriceGrabber User Ratings for MotherNature.com
Accept Credit Cards Online
creditcards

Order By Phone 1-800-439-5506 (M-F 9-5 EST)

Information on this site is provided for informational purposes and is not meant to substitute for the advice provided by your own physician or other medical professional. You should not use the information contained herein for diagnosing or treating a health problem or disease, or prescribing any medication. Information about each product is taken from the labels of the products or from the manufacturer's advertising material. MotherNature.com is not responsible for any statements or claims that various manufacturers make about their products. We cannot be held responsible for typographical errors or product formulation changes. You should read carefully all product packaging. If you have or suspect that you have a medical problem, promptly contact your health care provider. Information and statements regarding dietary supplements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration and are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.All discounts are taken from suggested retail prices.

Please see our Terms of Use
Copyright © 1995-2008 Mother Nature, Inc. All rights reserved.

bot ban