fbpx
Wikipedia

Breast pump

A breast pump is a mechanical device that lactating women use to extract milk from their breasts. They may be manual devices powered by hand or foot movements or automatic devices powered by electricity.

External videos
Distilled #7: Bicycle Horn or Breast Pump?, Distillations Podcast, Science History Institute, January 18, 2019.
AVENT isis manual breast pump
Ameda Purely Yours double electric breast pump worn with D'Lite hands-free breast pump bra
Hygeia Enjoye electric breast pump
Medela Symphony electric breast pump

History edit

On June 20, 1854, the United States Patent Office issued Patent No. 11,135 to O.H. Needham for a breast pump.[1][2] Scientific American (1863) credits L.O. Colbin as the inventor and patent applicant of a breast pump.[3] In 1921–23, engineer and chess master Edward Lasker produced a mechanical breast pump that imitated an infant's sucking action and was regarded by physicians as a marked improvement on existing hand-operated breast pumps, which failed to remove all the milk from the breast.[4] The U.S. Patent Office issued U.S. patent 1,644,257 for Lasker's breast pump.[5] In 1956 Einar Egnell published his groundbreaking work, "Viewpoints on what happens mechanically in the female breast during various methods of milk collection".[6] This article provided insight into the technical aspects of milk extraction from the breast. Many Egnell SMB breast pumps designed through this research are still in operation over 50 years after publication.

Archaeologists working at a glass factory site in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, excavated a 19th-century breast pipe that matches breast pumping instruments in period advertisements.[7]

Reasons for use edit

Breast pumps are used for many reasons.[citation needed] Many parents use them to continue breastfeeding after they return to work. They express their milk at work, which is later bottle-fed to their child by a caregiver. This use of breast milk is widespread in the United States, where paid family leave is one of the shortest in the developed world. American historian Jill Lepore argues that the need for so-called "lactation rooms" and breast pumps is driven by the corporate desire for parents to return to work immediately rather than mothers' wishes or babies' needs.[8]

A breast pump may also be used to stimulate lactation for women with a low milk supply or those who have not just given birth.[citation needed]

A breast pump may be also used to address a range of challenges parents may encounter breast feeding, including difficulties latching, separation from an infant in intensive care, to feed an infant who cannot extract sufficient milk itself from the breast, to avoid passing medication through breast milk to the baby, or to relieve engorgement, a painful condition whereby the breasts are overfull. Pumping may also be desirable to continue lactation and its associated hormones to aid in recovery from pregnancy even if the pumped milk is not used.[9][10]

In a 2012 policy statement, the American Academy of Pediatrics recommended feeding preterm infants human milk, finding "significant short- and long-term beneficial effects," including lower rates of necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC).[11] When infants are unable to suckle, mothers can pump if they wish their babies to be fed (via naso-gastric tube) with the mothers' own milk.[12]

Expressing milk for donation is another use for breast pumps. Donor milk may be available from milk banks for babies who are not able to receive their mothers' milk.[13]

"Pump and dump" refers to the practice of disposing of breast milk rather than pumping it to be used. This may be done because the mother produces too much milk, or because the mother will be away from the baby too long without a way to store the milk, or because of concern over alcohol or some other substance that the baby should not have.[14]

Efficiency edit

The breast pump is not as efficient at removing milk from the breast as most nursing babies or hand expression.[15]

Research done at Stanford University in 2009 showed the correlation of various factors with the volume of milk production in mothers of preterm babies (born before the 31st week of gestation).[16] The research found that hand expression in addition to a breast pump (a technique called "hands-on pumping", or HOP), along with other factors correlated to higher milk production. The study found that mothers who used massage techniques and hand expression more than 5 times a day in the first 3 days after birth increased their milk production 8 weeks later, milk production increased 48%. The authors produced a video showing the technique and states that this technique is good for both mothers of premature infants as well as mothers that return to work or pump for other purposes.[17]

A second article on the same study found that the combination of HOP techniques increased the fat content of the milk expressed.[18]

Mechanical properties edit

Mechanically, a breast pump triggers the milk ejection response or "letdown". A misconception is that the breast pump suctions milk out of the breast. Pumps achieve letdown by using suction to pull the nipple into the tunnel of the breast shield or flange, then release, which counts as one cycle. Thirty to sixty cycles per minute can be expected with better-quality electric breast pumps. This suction-release cycle can also be accomplished with hand pumps, which the nursing parent operates by compressing a handle.[citation needed]

Multiple sizes of flanges ranging from 13mm to 36mm are available to purchase from various manufacturers. Most pump manufacturers, however, supply their pumps with only standard 24 and 27 mm flanges. What leads to unawareness in pumping women and Lactation consultants about the need to be fit with the right size flange for efficient emptying during pumping.[citation needed]

There are several pump mechanisms. Piston pumps draw a piston through a cylinder to create suction. These tend to operate at low speed, have high reliability, low noise, and long life. Rotary vane pumps use a cam with retractable vanes to create suction and are no longer widely used. Fast-diaphragm pumps use a diaphragm that is acted on by a lever and can operate at thousands of cycles per minute. They tend to be noisy. Slow-diaphragm pumps use a larger diaphragm operated by a cam or lever to generate suction with each stroke. Pumps have also been designed that use venturi effects powered by a faucet or water stream, wall suction in hospitals, or oral suctioning.[citation needed]

Manual breast pumps edit

Manual breast pumps are operated by squeezing or pulling a handle in a repetitive fashion, allowing the user to directly control the pressure and frequency of milk expression. Though manual pumps are small and inexpensive, they can require significant effort and can be tiring because the user provides all the power. These pumps may not provide sufficient stimulation and emptying of the breast. "Bicycle-horn" style manual pumps can damage breast tissue and harbor bacteria in the rubber suction bulb, which is difficult to clean.[19][20][21]

Foot-powered breast pumps use the same collection tubing and breast horns as electric breast pumps, but are powered by a foot pedal. This eliminates the work of pumping by hand or the need for finding an electrical outlet with privacy.[22]

Electric breast pumps edit

There are two types of electric breast pumps, hospital-grade and personal-use. Hospital-grade pumps are larger and intended for multiple users. Personal-use pumps are generally intended for one user. Electric breast pumps are powered by a motor which supplies suction through plastic tubing to a horn that fits over the nipple. The portions of the pump that come into direct contact with the expressed milk must be sterilized to prevent contamination. This style provides more suction, making pumping significantly faster, and allows users to pump both their breasts at the same time. Electric breast pumps are larger than manual ones, but portable models are available (e.g. in a backpack or shoulder bag). Some models include battery packs or built-in batteries to enable portable operation of the pump. Some electric pumps allow multi-user operation but recommend an accessory kit for each user to maintain cleanliness.[23]

Rental pumps may be recommended when medical conditions temporarily preclude breastfeeding.[23]

Some breast pumps are designed to be part of a "feeding system" so that the milk storage portion of the pump is the baby bottle used to feed the infant. This allows the milk to be collected in the same bottle that will feed the baby eliminating the need to transfer breastmilk. Freezable breastmilk storage bags are available that connect directly to some breast pumps and can then be used with disposable bottle feeding systems.

Pressure range and safety edit

 
Chart showing most valuable mean pressure

Egnell in 1956 established a 220 mmHg safe maximum for automatic cycling pumps; however, there have been reports of sensitive breasts and nipples at much lower pressures. Hartman et al., in a 2008 study,[24] showed that the maximum comfortable vacuum enhances milk flow and milk yield.

Open collection systems vs. closed collection systems edit

Pump designs are referred to as either open or closed based on whether there is a barrier between where the tubing connects to the pump and where milk flows into the pump. The plastic tubing and horn of an electric breast pump are commonly referred to as the collection system and typically supply the pump's suction.

A closed collection system has a barrier or diaphragm that separates the pump tubing from the horn. In this design, the suction of the pump motor lifts the diaphragm to create a vacuum within the collection system to extract milk.

In contrast, an open system does not have a barrier between the tubing and the horn. Bacteria and viral filters may be present to prevent contamination or overflow into pump motor. The pump motor's suction is directly passed to the breast versus indirectly as with closed-diaphragm systems.[25]

Open-collection systems can cause milk to overflow into the collection system tubing, and milk particles being drawn into the pump motor. If milk leaks into the pump's tubing, the tubes should be washed, sterilized and air-dried prior to using the pump again. Failure to thoroughly clean collection tubing may lead to mould growth within the tubing. Some models of pumps have bacteria and overflow filters which prevent milk from entering the tubing.[25]

A subtype of the open-collection system is the single-user suction source. These pumps have added hygienic benefit in that all the parts that generate the suction and come in contact with breast milk stay with the mother. The parts that generate the suction are external to the pump and can be removed, preventing cross-contamination. These pumps are considered "hospital grade" and virtually eliminate the chance of cross-contamination of the pump from user to user.[25] However, it is important to clean the diaphragm as condensation or milk reaching this part can cause bacterial contamination.

A disadvantage of the diaphragm is that it may limit the amount of air/suction available to extract milk from the breast. It may also not be able to compensate for larger shield sizes.

There are no studies comparing the open- versus closed-system design. Most information in marketing materials by breast-pump manufacturers is offered without studies to back them up.

Milk collection and storage edit

Most breast pumps direct the pumped milk into a container that can be used for storage and feeding. Some manufacturers offer adapters to fit a variety of types and sizes of bottles, enabling more flexibility to mix and match products of different brands.

The expressed breast milk (EBM) may be stored and later fed to a baby by bottle. It can either be frozen directly in the bottle, or stored in disposable breast milk bags which are more compact when frozen, thus saving space in a freezer. Expressed milk may be kept at room temperature for up to six hours (at 66-72 degrees Fahrenheit, around 20 degrees Celsius), in an insulated cooler with ice packs for up to one day, refrigerated at the back of the refrigerator for up to 5 days (optimal: use or freeze the milk within 3 days), or frozen for 12 months in a deep freeze separate from a refrigerator maintained at a temperature of 0 degrees Fahrenheit or −18 degrees Celsius (optimal: use this milk within 6 months).[26] If using frozen milk, the oldest milk should be thawed and used first. Thawing can be done by placing the frozen milk in the refrigerator the night before intended use, or by placing the milk in a bowl of warm water. Breast milk should never be microwaved as this can produce dangerous hot areas and may also destroy the milk's antibodies. Many experts recommend discarding thawed milk that is not used within 24 hours.[26] Breast milk changes to meet a baby's needs so that breast milk expressed when a baby is a newborn will not as completely meet the same baby's needs when he or she is a few months older. Also, storage guidelines might differ for preterm, sick or hospitalized infants.

Expressed milk may be donated to milk banks, which provide human breast milk to premature infants and other children whose mothers cannot provide for them.[27]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Breast Pump, Patent No. 11,135 2017-05-02 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 2008-12-14.
  2. ^ Breast Pump, Patent No. 11,135 Google Patents abstract
  3. ^ Scientific American, Vol. 8, No. 4, January 24, 1863.
  4. ^ Edward Lasker, Chess Secrets I Learned from the Masters, David McKay, 1951, pp. 249-50. Lasker relates that he designed his device at the urging of pediatrician Dr. I.A. Abt of Chicago, and that Abt and obstetrician Dr. Joseph DeLee considered it a marked improvement on existing hand-operated breast pumps. Dr. DeLee considered the machine indispensable for any hospital that did maternity work. Id.
  5. ^ Patent No. 1,644,257 issued by U.S. Patent Office 2007-09-28 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ 1: Sven Lakartidn. 1956 Oct 5;53(40):2553-64.Links [Viewpoints on what happens mechanically in the female breast during various methods of milk collection.] [Article in Swedish] EGNELL E.
  7. ^ White, Rebecca (2013-08-07). "Symbols of motherhood: breast pipe and nursing bottle. Artifact of the month August 2013". Philadelphia Archaeological Forum. Retrieved 2 August 2014.
  8. ^ Lepore, Jill (12 January 2009). "Baby Food: If breast is best, why are women bottling their milk?". The New Yorker. Retrieved 29 December 2017.
  9. ^ Johns12, Helene M; Forster, Della A; Amir1, Lisa H; McLachlan, Helen L (2013-11-19). "Prevalence and outcomes of breast milk expressing in women with healthy term infants: a systematic review". BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth. 13 (212): 212. doi:10.1186/1471-2393-13-212. PMC 4225568. PMID 24246046.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  10. ^ Rasmussen, Kathleen M.; Geraghty, Sheela R. (August 2011). "The Quiet Revolution: Breastfeeding Transformed With the Use of Breast Pumps". Am J Public Health. 101 (8): 1356–1359. doi:10.2105/AJPH.2011.300136. PMC 3134520. PMID 21680919.
  11. ^ American Academy of Pediatrics, Section on Breastfeeding (2012). "Breastfeeding and the Use of Human Milk". Pediatrics. 129 (3): e827–e841. doi:10.1542/peds.2011-3552. PMID 22371471. Retrieved 2013-07-25. Meta-analyses of 4 randomized clinical trials performed over the period 1983 to 2005 support the conclusion that feeding preterm infants human milk is associated with a significant reduction (58%) in the incidence of NEC.
  12. ^ . March of Dimes. Archived from the original on 2014-09-06. Retrieved 2014-03-14.
  13. ^ . International Breast Milk Project. Archived from the original on 10 September 2015. Retrieved 21 September 2015.
  14. ^ "'Pump and Dump': What Is It?". WebMD. 5 March 2021. Retrieved 2 June 2022.
  15. ^ Breastfeeding Myths April 5, 2013, at the Wayback Machine. Boob Baby. Accessed on May 16, 2013.
  16. ^ J. Morton et al. "Combining hand techniques with electric pumping increases milk production in mothers of preterm infants" J Perinatology (2009) 29 757-764
  17. ^ "Home". November 2023.
  18. ^ J Morton et al. "Combining hand techniques with electric pumping increases the caloric content of milk in mothers or preterm infants" J Perinatology (2012) 32 791-796
  19. ^ . Breastfeeding Made Easier At Home And Work. Womenshealth.gov. Archived from the original on 14 January 2009.
  20. ^ . Breastfeeding. Womenshealth.gov. 1 August 2010. Archived from the original on 10 February 2012.
  21. ^ Corley, Heather. . About.com. Archived from the original on 17 February 2012. Retrieved 9 March 2012.
  22. ^ A US patent 5304129 A, Suzanne E. Forgach, "Pivotable foot operated breast pump", issued 1994-04-19 
  23. ^ a b "Buying or Renting a Breast Pump". fda.gov. Food and Drug Administration. Retrieved 21 September 2015.
  24. ^ Hartman, P, et al. Importance of Vacuum for Milk Expression Breastfeeding Med 3(1) 11-19
  25. ^ a b c Shu., Dr. Jennifer (2011-06-13). "Is a used breast pump safe?". CNN. Retrieved 21 September 2015.
  26. ^ a b Mayo Clinic Staff (2020-04-01). "Breast milk storage: Do's and don'ts". mayoclinic.org. The Mayo Clinic. Retrieved 2020-07-12.
  27. ^ Henry, Shannon (2007-01-16). "Banking on Milk". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2015-10-17.

External links edit

  • Collecting and storing breastmilk – California Department of Health Services
  • Storing Breast Milk/Thawing Frozen Breast Milk – City of Toronto Health Department
  • La Leche League International

breast, pump, breast, pump, mechanical, device, that, lactating, women, extract, milk, from, their, breasts, they, manual, devices, powered, hand, foot, movements, automatic, devices, powered, electricity, external, videosdistilled, bicycle, horn, breast, pump. A breast pump is a mechanical device that lactating women use to extract milk from their breasts They may be manual devices powered by hand or foot movements or automatic devices powered by electricity External videosDistilled 7 Bicycle Horn or Breast Pump Distillations Podcast Science History Institute January 18 2019 AVENT isis manual breast pump Ameda Purely Yours double electric breast pump worn with D Lite hands free breast pump bra Hygeia Enjoye electric breast pump Medela Symphony electric breast pump Contents 1 History 2 Reasons for use 3 Efficiency 4 Mechanical properties 5 Manual breast pumps 6 Electric breast pumps 7 Pressure range and safety 8 Open collection systems vs closed collection systems 9 Milk collection and storage 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksHistory editOn June 20 1854 the United States Patent Office issued Patent No 11 135 to O H Needham for a breast pump 1 2 Scientific American 1863 credits L O Colbin as the inventor and patent applicant of a breast pump 3 In 1921 23 engineer and chess master Edward Lasker produced a mechanical breast pump that imitated an infant s sucking action and was regarded by physicians as a marked improvement on existing hand operated breast pumps which failed to remove all the milk from the breast 4 The U S Patent Office issued U S patent 1 644 257 for Lasker s breast pump 5 In 1956 Einar Egnell published his groundbreaking work Viewpoints on what happens mechanically in the female breast during various methods of milk collection 6 This article provided insight into the technical aspects of milk extraction from the breast Many Egnell SMB breast pumps designed through this research are still in operation over 50 years after publication Archaeologists working at a glass factory site in Philadelphia Pennsylvania excavated a 19th century breast pipe that matches breast pumping instruments in period advertisements 7 Reasons for use editBreast pumps are used for many reasons citation needed Many parents use them to continue breastfeeding after they return to work They express their milk at work which is later bottle fed to their child by a caregiver This use of breast milk is widespread in the United States where paid family leave is one of the shortest in the developed world American historian Jill Lepore argues that the need for so called lactation rooms and breast pumps is driven by the corporate desire for parents to return to work immediately rather than mothers wishes or babies needs 8 A breast pump may also be used to stimulate lactation for women with a low milk supply or those who have not just given birth citation needed A breast pump may be also used to address a range of challenges parents may encounter breast feeding including difficulties latching separation from an infant in intensive care to feed an infant who cannot extract sufficient milk itself from the breast to avoid passing medication through breast milk to the baby or to relieve engorgement a painful condition whereby the breasts are overfull Pumping may also be desirable to continue lactation and its associated hormones to aid in recovery from pregnancy even if the pumped milk is not used 9 10 In a 2012 policy statement the American Academy of Pediatrics recommended feeding preterm infants human milk finding significant short and long term beneficial effects including lower rates of necrotizing enterocolitis NEC 11 When infants are unable to suckle mothers can pump if they wish their babies to be fed via naso gastric tube with the mothers own milk 12 Expressing milk for donation is another use for breast pumps Donor milk may be available from milk banks for babies who are not able to receive their mothers milk 13 Pump and dump refers to the practice of disposing of breast milk rather than pumping it to be used This may be done because the mother produces too much milk or because the mother will be away from the baby too long without a way to store the milk or because of concern over alcohol or some other substance that the baby should not have 14 Efficiency editThe breast pump is not as efficient at removing milk from the breast as most nursing babies or hand expression 15 Research done at Stanford University in 2009 showed the correlation of various factors with the volume of milk production in mothers of preterm babies born before the 31st week of gestation 16 The research found that hand expression in addition to a breast pump a technique called hands on pumping or HOP along with other factors correlated to higher milk production The study found that mothers who used massage techniques and hand expression more than 5 times a day in the first 3 days after birth increased their milk production 8 weeks later milk production increased 48 The authors produced a video showing the technique and states that this technique is good for both mothers of premature infants as well as mothers that return to work or pump for other purposes 17 A second article on the same study found that the combination of HOP techniques increased the fat content of the milk expressed 18 Mechanical properties editMechanically a breast pump triggers the milk ejection response or letdown A misconception is that the breast pump suctions milk out of the breast Pumps achieve letdown by using suction to pull the nipple into the tunnel of the breast shield or flange then release which counts as one cycle Thirty to sixty cycles per minute can be expected with better quality electric breast pumps This suction release cycle can also be accomplished with hand pumps which the nursing parent operates by compressing a handle citation needed Multiple sizes of flanges ranging from 13mm to 36mm are available to purchase from various manufacturers Most pump manufacturers however supply their pumps with only standard 24 and 27 mm flanges What leads to unawareness in pumping women and Lactation consultants about the need to be fit with the right size flange for efficient emptying during pumping citation needed There are several pump mechanisms Piston pumps draw a piston through a cylinder to create suction These tend to operate at low speed have high reliability low noise and long life Rotary vane pumps use a cam with retractable vanes to create suction and are no longer widely used Fast diaphragm pumps use a diaphragm that is acted on by a lever and can operate at thousands of cycles per minute They tend to be noisy Slow diaphragm pumps use a larger diaphragm operated by a cam or lever to generate suction with each stroke Pumps have also been designed that use venturi effects powered by a faucet or water stream wall suction in hospitals or oral suctioning citation needed Manual breast pumps editManual breast pumps are operated by squeezing or pulling a handle in a repetitive fashion allowing the user to directly control the pressure and frequency of milk expression Though manual pumps are small and inexpensive they can require significant effort and can be tiring because the user provides all the power These pumps may not provide sufficient stimulation and emptying of the breast Bicycle horn style manual pumps can damage breast tissue and harbor bacteria in the rubber suction bulb which is difficult to clean 19 20 21 Foot powered breast pumps use the same collection tubing and breast horns as electric breast pumps but are powered by a foot pedal This eliminates the work of pumping by hand or the need for finding an electrical outlet with privacy 22 Electric breast pumps editThere are two types of electric breast pumps hospital grade and personal use Hospital grade pumps are larger and intended for multiple users Personal use pumps are generally intended for one user Electric breast pumps are powered by a motor which supplies suction through plastic tubing to a horn that fits over the nipple The portions of the pump that come into direct contact with the expressed milk must be sterilized to prevent contamination This style provides more suction making pumping significantly faster and allows users to pump both their breasts at the same time Electric breast pumps are larger than manual ones but portable models are available e g in a backpack or shoulder bag Some models include battery packs or built in batteries to enable portable operation of the pump Some electric pumps allow multi user operation but recommend an accessory kit for each user to maintain cleanliness 23 Rental pumps may be recommended when medical conditions temporarily preclude breastfeeding 23 Some breast pumps are designed to be part of a feeding system so that the milk storage portion of the pump is the baby bottle used to feed the infant This allows the milk to be collected in the same bottle that will feed the baby eliminating the need to transfer breastmilk Freezable breastmilk storage bags are available that connect directly to some breast pumps and can then be used with disposable bottle feeding systems Pressure range and safety edit nbsp Chart showing most valuable mean pressure Egnell in 1956 established a 220 mmHg safe maximum for automatic cycling pumps however there have been reports of sensitive breasts and nipples at much lower pressures Hartman et al in a 2008 study 24 showed that the maximum comfortable vacuum enhances milk flow and milk yield Open collection systems vs closed collection systems editPump designs are referred to as either open or closed based on whether there is a barrier between where the tubing connects to the pump and where milk flows into the pump The plastic tubing and horn of an electric breast pump are commonly referred to as the collection system and typically supply the pump s suction A closed collection system has a barrier or diaphragm that separates the pump tubing from the horn In this design the suction of the pump motor lifts the diaphragm to create a vacuum within the collection system to extract milk In contrast an open system does not have a barrier between the tubing and the horn Bacteria and viral filters may be present to prevent contamination or overflow into pump motor The pump motor s suction is directly passed to the breast versus indirectly as with closed diaphragm systems 25 Open collection systems can cause milk to overflow into the collection system tubing and milk particles being drawn into the pump motor If milk leaks into the pump s tubing the tubes should be washed sterilized and air dried prior to using the pump again Failure to thoroughly clean collection tubing may lead to mould growth within the tubing Some models of pumps have bacteria and overflow filters which prevent milk from entering the tubing 25 A subtype of the open collection system is the single user suction source These pumps have added hygienic benefit in that all the parts that generate the suction and come in contact with breast milk stay with the mother The parts that generate the suction are external to the pump and can be removed preventing cross contamination These pumps are considered hospital grade and virtually eliminate the chance of cross contamination of the pump from user to user 25 However it is important to clean the diaphragm as condensation or milk reaching this part can cause bacterial contamination A disadvantage of the diaphragm is that it may limit the amount of air suction available to extract milk from the breast It may also not be able to compensate for larger shield sizes There are no studies comparing the open versus closed system design Most information in marketing materials by breast pump manufacturers is offered without studies to back them up Milk collection and storage editMost breast pumps direct the pumped milk into a container that can be used for storage and feeding Some manufacturers offer adapters to fit a variety of types and sizes of bottles enabling more flexibility to mix and match products of different brands The expressed breast milk EBM may be stored and later fed to a baby by bottle It can either be frozen directly in the bottle or stored in disposable breast milk bags which are more compact when frozen thus saving space in a freezer Expressed milk may be kept at room temperature for up to six hours at 66 72 degrees Fahrenheit around 20 degrees Celsius in an insulated cooler with ice packs for up to one day refrigerated at the back of the refrigerator for up to 5 days optimal use or freeze the milk within 3 days or frozen for 12 months in a deep freeze separate from a refrigerator maintained at a temperature of 0 degrees Fahrenheit or 18 degrees Celsius optimal use this milk within 6 months 26 If using frozen milk the oldest milk should be thawed and used first Thawing can be done by placing the frozen milk in the refrigerator the night before intended use or by placing the milk in a bowl of warm water Breast milk should never be microwaved as this can produce dangerous hot areas and may also destroy the milk s antibodies Many experts recommend discarding thawed milk that is not used within 24 hours 26 Breast milk changes to meet a baby s needs so that breast milk expressed when a baby is a newborn will not as completely meet the same baby s needs when he or she is a few months older Also storage guidelines might differ for preterm sick or hospitalized infants Expressed milk may be donated to milk banks which provide human breast milk to premature infants and other children whose mothers cannot provide for them 27 See also editBreastmilk storage and handling Lactation suppression Milking Wet nurse a woman who feeds a baby who is not her ownReferences edit Breast Pump Patent No 11 135 Archived 2017 05 02 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 2008 12 14 Breast Pump Patent No 11 135 Google Patents abstract Scientific American Vol 8 No 4 January 24 1863 Edward Lasker Chess Secrets I Learned from the Masters David McKay 1951 pp 249 50 Lasker relates that he designed his device at the urging of pediatrician Dr I A Abt of Chicago and that Abt and obstetrician Dr Joseph DeLee considered it a marked improvement on existing hand operated breast pumps Dr DeLee considered the machine indispensable for any hospital that did maternity work Id Patent No 1 644 257 issued by U S Patent Office Archived 2007 09 28 at the Wayback Machine 1 Sven Lakartidn 1956 Oct 5 53 40 2553 64 Links Viewpoints on what happens mechanically in the female breast during various methods of milk collection Article in Swedish EGNELL E White Rebecca 2013 08 07 Symbols of motherhood breast pipe and nursing bottle Artifact of the month August 2013 Philadelphia Archaeological Forum Retrieved 2 August 2014 Lepore Jill 12 January 2009 Baby Food If breast is best why are women bottling their milk The New Yorker Retrieved 29 December 2017 Johns12 Helene M Forster Della A Amir1 Lisa H McLachlan Helen L 2013 11 19 Prevalence and outcomes of breast milk expressing in women with healthy term infants a systematic review BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth 13 212 212 doi 10 1186 1471 2393 13 212 PMC 4225568 PMID 24246046 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Rasmussen Kathleen M Geraghty Sheela R August 2011 The Quiet Revolution Breastfeeding Transformed With the Use of Breast Pumps Am J Public Health 101 8 1356 1359 doi 10 2105 AJPH 2011 300136 PMC 3134520 PMID 21680919 American Academy of Pediatrics Section on Breastfeeding 2012 Breastfeeding and the Use of Human Milk Pediatrics 129 3 e827 e841 doi 10 1542 peds 2011 3552 PMID 22371471 Retrieved 2013 07 25 Meta analyses of 4 randomized clinical trials performed over the period 1983 to 2005 support the conclusion that feeding preterm infants human milk is associated with a significant reduction 58 in the incidence of NEC Feeding Your Baby in the NICU March of Dimes Archived from the original on 2014 09 06 Retrieved 2014 03 14 Milk Donation FAQ International Breast Milk Project Archived from the original on 10 September 2015 Retrieved 21 September 2015 Pump and Dump What Is It WebMD 5 March 2021 Retrieved 2 June 2022 Breastfeeding Myths Archived April 5 2013 at the Wayback Machine Boob Baby Accessed on May 16 2013 J Morton et al Combining hand techniques with electric pumping increases milk production in mothers of preterm infants J Perinatology 2009 29 757 764 Home November 2023 J Morton et al Combining hand techniques with electric pumping increases the caloric content of milk in mothers or preterm infants J Perinatology 2012 32 791 796 Breastfeeding and Pumping Accessories Breastfeeding Made Easier At Home And Work Womenshealth gov Archived from the original on 14 January 2009 Pumping and milk storage Breastfeeding Womenshealth gov 1 August 2010 Archived from the original on 10 February 2012 Corley Heather Before You Buy A Breast Pump About com Archived from the original on 17 February 2012 Retrieved 9 March 2012 A US patent 5304129 A Suzanne E Forgach Pivotable foot operated breast pump issued 1994 04 19 a b Buying or Renting a Breast Pump fda gov Food and Drug Administration Retrieved 21 September 2015 Hartman P et al Importance of Vacuum for Milk Expression Breastfeeding Med 3 1 11 19 a b c Shu Dr Jennifer 2011 06 13 Is a used breast pump safe CNN Retrieved 21 September 2015 a b Mayo Clinic Staff 2020 04 01 Breast milk storage Do s and don ts mayoclinic org The Mayo Clinic Retrieved 2020 07 12 Henry Shannon 2007 01 16 Banking on Milk The Washington Post Retrieved 2015 10 17 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Breast pumps Collecting and storing breastmilk California Department of Health Services Storing Breast Milk Thawing Frozen Breast Milk City of Toronto Health Department La Leche League International Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Breast pump amp oldid 1221472052, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.