29 answers

Breast Engorgement- Seeking Help to Stop Supply of Milk

I have a 18month old I' trying to ween from nursing. It's also my 5yr. anniversary, so he is with grandma just one more night. Breast are very engorged, hard as a rock. Also my OB-GYN has just retired, so no advice there. I've been applying ice packs,but that's going slow. Please help if anyone has any solutions.

1 mom found this helpful

What can I do next?

So What Happened?™

Hello Everyone, Sorry for taking so long to respond. Thanks for all the great advice, it was very helpful. Saturday will be a week strong. Breast are less engorged, I'm applying ice packs daily & doing light squeezes in the shower. Also a few antihestamine tablets. It has been a day by day process,the little one is a bit emotional,mainly at bed time. He's getting better day by day,bit by bit.My husband puts him to bed. Another solid week and he should be weend. Thanks again for all the responses.

Featured Answers

Hi T., I just weaned my 16 month old last month and I also had very sore breasts. I found that pumping just a tiny bit (like 1 oz) was enough to alleviate the discomfort, but not so much that it slowed down the process of the milk drying up. Hot showers also helped. Good luck. D.

Pump only a little for relief and freeze it - no sense in wasting it. Then go have a friend wrap you very tightly in elastic bandages. You will be miserable for several days and do not even think of taking them off until the pain subsides. It really works!! I know this sounds very old-fashioned, bit it really works.

Good luck and blessings to you -

+B+

Hi,
The doctor or pharmacy can give you a pill to help you to dry up. I do believe you can get them with out a perscription???? Good Luck
L.

More Answers

A lactation specialist told me to use cabbage leaves as well. What you have to do is take a leaf off and roll it flat with a rolling pin. By rolling it out it breaks up something in the leaf. Put the leaf in your bra. After about 15 mins in the bra my milk came pouring out. It really works!
Good luck!
B.

1 mom found this helpful

pack fresh sage leaves into your bra and drink sage tea. Will help stop the milk production. Also, wet hot compresses can help with the pain of engorgement and help to prevent mastitis. Good luck!

1 mom found this helpful

T., Here's what I did under the advice of a lactation consultant. Wrap chest tightly with an ace bandage with bags of fz peas on/around your breasts inside the wrap. Bags of fz peas can conform to the shape of your breasts, making them more effective than ice packs. Also, be sure to drop just one feeding at a time (pump at other times if you want to stay consistent w/ the bottle/cup from here on out). Choose a feeding to drop and, at most, pump for about two minutes the first day to relieve some pressure. The next day, just skip the feeding all together. Wrap the fz peas tightly onto yourself during that time both days (and the next, if necessary). After a couple of days, you should be able to drop that feeding. Then, pick a feeding far away timewise from the one you just ended and repeat the process. Keep doing this until all feedings are dropped. This probably won't help for your anniversary, though (congrats, btw!). To help with the engorgement, fill a sink (or bowl) with warm water and submerge your breast for 5-10 minutes. Then either pump for 10 minutes if it's a feeding you are not trying to eliminate or pump for 1-2 minutes to relieve the pressure if you are trying to eliminate that feeding. Some can just squeeze their breasts into a towel to relieve some pressure, though I could never bring myself to do that. Stopping your milk supply is a slow, methodical process if you want to make sure you do not get engorged and, worse, mastitis. Try the cabbage leaves and other suggestions, too. I didn't use them but would have done just about anything. Can't hurt!

1 mom found this helpful

You can express some milk yourself. It works well in the shower. This will give you some relief!
Here's how, from google:
gently massage or stroke the breast from chest towards nipple; to soften the breast. 8-10 times.
put your thumb over areola (the black circle around nipple); and other fingers below nipple parallel to it.
now push back the breast to chest wall keeping finger at areola; 2-4 times.
alternate above movement with gentle pressing of areola to express milk; keeping fingers at same position.
now rotate fingers around nipple; parallel to each other to get more milk.
spend 3-5 minutes per breast; lo u did it.

1 mom found this helpful

T.,
I would pump, but only enough to relieve you. After a few days your body will realize your not using as much as you used to. It will slow down by itself. Also cabbage leaves frozen in the freezer are awesome. They have something in the leaf that helps with this. Also standing facing a hot shower will allow them to leak a little therefore helping to bring some comfort. Just don't empty the breast. This way it will send a message to the milk glands that produce the prolactin not to make anymore milk.
Good luck, I know how you feel,
trish

A couple of great resources for breast feeding (for future reference)...

www.kellymom.com
www.llli.org

Good luck!

T.
Founder
www.theparentpack.org

cabbage leaves are supposed to be a natural way to help stop production. place them in your bra.

It usually takes about a week, but for me was only really uncomfortable for three days or so. Binding your breasts tightly really helps--wear a tight sportsbra or two (one over the other) day and night. Motrin helps relieve the pain and inflamation, too. Ice is good, but sportsbras helped me the most.

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