Title: LACTATION
1LACTATION
2Topics to be covered
- What is lactation
- Anatomy of the breast
- Development of the breast
- Histology of the lactating mammary gland
- Hormonal control of Breast growth and lactation
- Composition of milk
3What is lactation?
- Feeding human breast-milk to provide for the
nutritional needs of infants - An alternative to human breast milk is by using
formula feeding which is food products designed
to provide for the nutritional needs of infants.
They include powders, concentrates or
ready-to-use forms
4Milk Formula
- Should contain the right balance of nutrients
according to the age of the infant or child and
formulated as close as possible to breast milk
i.e., - nutrient contents automatically changes with
babies needs - DHA (Docosahexaenoic Acid), Protein, Sialic acid,
choline, taurine, other omega 3 and 6, inulin
dietary fibr, calcium, iron, essential vitamins
and vital minerals in quantities appropriate for
infants and children developmental needs. -
- Some also contains L Bifidus, a type of friendly
and beneficial bacteria found in the intestinal
tract which enables the child to obtain all the
goodness from food for growth development. - Available in either regular, honey, mild
chocolate or fine cereals -
- Some powders which are soya based are formulated
for lactose intolerance babies. Soya based milk
is quite expensive.
5Examples of milk formula/powder in Malaysia
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7Breast milk is the best!!!!
Milk glands
Areola
Proper latching on
8Anatomy of breast
- External structure
- Breast situated on the anterior chest wall
between 2nd and 6th ribs, extended to the sternum
and axilla - In the centre-erectile structure-nipple
- Has 15-29 opening of lactiferous duct.
- The areola is area of loose skin with 18-20
sebaceous gland.
9Anatomy
- Internal structure
- Mature breast consist of glandular tissue, ductal
- tissue, fibrous tissue and fatty tissue
- A. Glandular tissue
- Produce milk
- Acinar secretory cell are arranged to alveolus
- Alveolus will form lobules
- Lobules will form lobes
- There are 15-20 lobes, each consist of 20-40
lobules which include 10-100 alveoli
10- B. Ductal tissue
- Transport milk
- Group of alveoli empty their milk into distal
lactiferous duct - Many lactiferous duct units to form major duct.
- Each major duct widen to form an ampulla
(lactiferous sinus) as it reach the areola - Each ampulla narrow to form separate opening on
the nipple
11- C. Fibrous tissue
- Support the breast
- Chest wall superficial fascia condenses to form
multiple fascial bands ( Cooper ligaments) - D. Fatty tissue
- comprises of 85 of breast
- Responsible for bulk and shape
12Picture 1 Breast structure
13Formation of mammary glands
- During birth, mammary glands consists of sparse
alveoli and abundant lactiferous ducts - After puberty, under the influence of estrogen,
these ducts will produce branches which ends in
polyhedral granular cells that are dense, small
and circular (true alveoli) - E and P4 will stimulate the growth of
ductal-lobular-alveolar system and breast
enlargement with fat deposition and growth of
connective tissue
14Breast changes during pregnancy
- Breast hypertrophy occur with pregnancy
- Size increase 400g each
- Blood flow double
- Areola enlarged and pigmented
- Montogomery glands becomes prominent.
- Increase fat deposition and retention of fluid
and electrolyte
15Hormonal control of breast and lactation
- Breast growth during pregnancy is associated with
increase levels of oestrogen, progesterone, hPL
and prolactin from maternal pituitary - Oestrogen promote duct growth
- However alveolar development require full complex
of hormones - Oestrogen and progesterone inhibit lactogenic
effects of hPL and prolactin - After delivery, rapidly decreasing level of
steroids?milk secretion occur
16Histology of lactating breast
- Alveolar epithelium consists of short columnar
cells with microvillous surface - There is a prominent endoplasmic reticulum and
golgi apparatus at the base of cells - Both fat droplet and vesicle(lactoseprotein)
from GA fuse with the cell membrane and
discharged into lumen. - Milk are stored alveoli, duct and cistern
- When lactation ceases? extensive degeneration of
lactogenic cells, a phagocytic reaction and fatty
tissue infiltration
17Milk ejection reflex
- Suckling stimulates release of prolactin and
oxytocin via neurological pathways between nipple
and the hypothalamus. - Milk ejection is brought about by the contraction
of myometrial cells around the alveoli and ducts
under influence of pituitary oxytocin.
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20- This sharp increase in prolactin secretion,
- diminishes progressively over 3 months of BF
- No direct relationship between prolactin level
and milk yield - The most important factors are removal of the
milk?promotes further milk production - In the absence of suckling, maternal level of
prolactin reduced slowly to reach non pregnant
value after 2-3 weeks
21Milk ejection reflex
- MER a neuroendocrine reflex and a conditioned
reflex - Apart from touch and pressure on the nipple,
stimulation from a babys cry for milk, thoughts
of your baby and lactation times can cause milk
let-down - This conditioned reflex is more for release of
oxytocin and not prolactin - Stimulation to vagina and cervix can also cause
milk let-down
22- MER can be inhibited due to pain after labour,
anxiety and worries whether you are feeding the
baby enough - All these will cause inhibition of oxytocin
release
23Fertility during lactation
- Some women assumes their menstrual cycle right
after puerperium - Some women may have no menses for almost a year
or as long as baby is breast-feeding (Prolactin
inhibits the hormones for control of regular
menstruation) - May be use as a natural contraceptive
24Advantages of breast milk
- Free
- Comes at the right temperature
- Release on demand
- Changes to suit babys needs
- Comes in an attractive package
25Stage of lactation(Summary)
Stages Defination Onset Initiating events Ostrogen, progesterone, prolactin
Mammogenesis Preparing breast for milk secretion Puberty Increasing level of oestrogen and progesterone Oestrogen Progesterone Prolactin, GH, insulin, cortisols
Lactogenesis Initiation of milk secretion in alveoli Post partum Declining O, P, hPL prolactin
Galactopoiesis Maintanace of established milk secretion After each emptying of duct and alveoli Periodic suckling Oxytocin prolactin
26Colostrum
- Is a yellow fluid containing fat laden cells and
large quantity of protein and minerals. - Secreted first 24 48 hours of life
- Highest absorption occurs in first 24 hours of
life - Contains relatively higher levels of IgG, IgM,
and IgA including antibodies to bacteria esp
E.coli - After 1st week, predominant IG is secretory IgA
27Composition of human milk (produced 2 to 3 days
post delivery)
Component Human
Water 85
Carbohydrate 7 (Lactose)
Protein 1-1.5 (40 casein)
Lipids 3.5 (palmitic, oleic acid)
Enzymes Amylase, catalase, peroxidase, lipase to help in digestion
Mineral Vit A abundant
Immunology IgA protect against enteric bacteria, T and B cell lymphocytes provides active immunity
28- When lactation stops, the involution of the
mammary glands occur after three months - Distension and mechanical atrophy occurs to the
epithelial - structure, rupture to the alveoli wall and
formation of cavities in the mammary tissue - Alveolar distension will cause alveolar hypoxia
- After phagocytosis of dead cells, the
lobular-acinar structure becomes smaller and the
ductular system predominates - The alveolar lumen decreases and dissapears and
the surface changes to a double non-secretory
layer - Milk production can also be terminated by a
lactation depressant using bromocriptine, an
agonist receptor Dopamine D2 that inhibits
prolactin release
29Other Breast milk benefit