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Mastitis is a bacterial infection of the breast that usually occurs
in breastfeeding mothers. However, it can occur in women who are
not breastfeeding or pregnant, and can occur even in small babies
of either sex. Nobody knows exactly why some women get mastitis
and others do not. Bacteria may gain access to the breast through
a crack or sore in the nipple, but women without sore nipples
also get mastitis, and most women with cracks in the nipple do
not.
Mastitis needs to be differentiated from a plugged or blocked
duct, because a plugged or blocked duct does not need treatment
with antibiotics, whereas mastitis often, but not always, requires
treatment with antibiotics. A blocked duct presents as a painful,
swollen, firm mass in the breast. The skin overlying the blocked
duct is often quite red, similar to what happens during mastitis,
but less intense. Mastitis is usually also associated with fever
and more intense pain as well. However, it is not always easy
to distinguish between a mild mastitis and a severe blocked
duct. Both are associated with a painful lump in the breast.
Without a lump in the breast, one cannot make a diagnosis of
mastitis or a blocked duct. A blocked duct can, apparently,
go on to become mastitis. In France, physicians also recognize
something they call lymphangite that is fever associated with
skin which is hot and red, but there is no underlying painful
mass. They do not believe this requires treatment with antibiotics.
I have seen a few cases that fit this description in my practice,
and indeed, the problem resolves without antibiotics. But then,
often a full blow mastitis also resolves without antibiotics.
As with almost all breastfeeding problems, a poor latch, and
thus, poor draining of the breast sets up the situation where
mastitis is more likely to occur.
Blocked ducts
Blocked ducts will almost always resolve spontaneously within
24 to 48 hours after onset, even without any treatment at all.
During the time the block is present, the baby may be fussy
when nursing on that side, as milk flow may be slower than usual,
probably due to pressure causing collapse of other ducts. Blocked
ducts can be made to resolve more quickly by:
1. Continuing breastfeeding on the affected
side.
2. Draining the affected area better. One way
of doing this is to position the baby so his chin “points”
to the area of hardness. Thus if the blocked duct is in the
outside, lower area of your breast (about 4 o’clock),
the football hold would be best. Another way of achieving better
draining of the breast is using breast compression while the
baby is feeding, getting your hand around the blocked duct and
using steady pressure as the baby sucks (See handout #15, Breast
Compression)
3. Applying heat to the affected area (with
a heating pad or hot water bottle, but be careful not to injure
your skin by using too much heat for too long a period of time).
4. Trying to rest. (Not always easy, but take
the baby to bed with you.)
If the blocked duct is associated with a small blister on the
end of the nipple, you can open it with a sterile needle. Flame
a sewing needle or a pin, let it cool off, and puncture the
blister. No need to dig around. Just pop the top or side of
the blister. Sometimes you can squeeze out a little toothpaste
like material from the duct and the duct will immediately unblock.
Or, put the baby to the breast and he may unblock it for you.
Opening the blister has the added benefit of decreasing nipple
pain, even if the blocked duct does not immediately resolve.
Come to the clinic if you cannot do it yourself.
If a blocked duct has not settled within 48 hours (unusual),
therapeutic ultrasound often works. This can be arranged at
a neighbourhood physiotherapy office or sports medicine clinic.
Many ultrasound therapists are not aware of this use for ultrasound.
The dose is:
2 watts/cm², continuous, for five minutes to the affected
area, once daily for up to two doses.
If two treatments on two consecutive days have not worked,
there is no point in continuing with ultrasound. Get the blocked
duct re-evaluated at the clinic or by your own physician. Usually,
however, if ultrasound is going to work, one treatment is all
that is needed. Ultrasound also seems to prevent recurrent blocked
ducts that always occur in the same part of the breast. Lecithin,
one capsule (1200 mg) 3 or 4 times a day also seems to prevent
recurrent blocked ducts, at least in some mothers.
Mastitis
Here is my approach to dealing with mastitis.
• If the mother has symptoms consistent with mastitis
for more than 24 hours, she should start antibiotics. If the
mother has consistent symptoms for less than 24 hours, I will
prescribe an antibiotic, but suggest the mother wait before
starting to take it. If, over the next 8-12 hours, her symptoms
are worsening (more pain, more spreading of the redness, enlargement
of the hardened area), then the mother should start the antibiotics.
If, over the next 24 hours, the mother has not worsened, but
not improved, she should start the antibiotics. However, if
symptoms are starting to decrease, there is no need to start
the antibiotics. The symptoms usually will continue to resolve
and will have disappeared over the next 2 to 5 days. Fever will
usually be gone within 24 hours, the pain within 24 to 48 hours,
and the breast hardness within the next few days. The redness
may remain for a week or longer. Once improvement begins, with
or without antibiotics, it should continue. If the course of
your mastitis does not follow this pattern, contact the clinic.
• Note: Amoxicillin, plain penicillin, and some other
antibiotics often prescribed for mastitis are usually useless
for mastitis. If you need an antibiotic, it must be effective
against Staphylococcus aureus. Effective for this bacterium
are: cephalexin, cloxacillin, flucloxacillin, amoxicillin-clavulinic
acid, clindamycin and ciprofloxacin. The last two are effective
for mothers allergic to penicillin. You can and should continue
breastfeeding while taking these medications.
Remember:
• Continue breastfeeding, unless it is just too painful
to do so. If you cannot, at least express your milk as best
you can in the meantime. Restart breastfeeding as soon as you
are up to it, the sooner the better. Continuing breastfeeding
helps mastitis to resolve more quickly. There is no danger for
the baby.
• Heat (hot water bottle or heating pad) applied to the
affected area helps healing.
• Rest helps fight off infection.
• Fever helps fight off infection. Treat fever if it makes
you feel terrible, not just because it is there.
• Medication (acetaminophen, ibuprofen, others) for pain
can be very good. You will feel better and the amount that gets
to the baby is insignificant. Acetaminophen is probably less
useful as it does not have an anti-inflammatory effect.
Abscess: An abscess occasionally complicates
mastitis. You do not have to stop breastfeeding, not even on
the affected side. In the past, an abscess was almost always
drained surgically. Now, more and more, repeated needle aspiration
or drainage under radiographic control is done, and interferes
less with breastfeeding. If you need surgery, the incision should
be kept as far away as possible from the areola. Contact the
clinic.
A lump which isn’t going away: If you
have a lump that is not going away or getting smaller over more
than a couple of weeks, you should be seen by a breastfeeding
friendly physician or surgeon. You don’t have to stop
breastfeeding to get a breast lump investigated (Ultrasound,
mammogram, and even biopsy do not require you to stop breastfeeding
even on the affected side). A breastfeeding friendly surgeon
will not tell you that you must stop breastfeeding before s/he
can do tests for a breast lump.
Questions? (416) 813-5757 (option 3) or drjacknewman@sympatico.ca
or my book Dr. Jack Newman’s Guide to Breastfeeding (called
The Ultimate Breastfeeding Book of Answers in the USA)
See the website www.thebirthden.com/Newman.html which contains
videos showing how to latch a baby on, how to know a baby is
getting milk, how to use compression, etc.
Handout #22 Blocked Ducts and Mastitis. Revised January 2005
Written by Jack Newman, MD, FRCPC. © 2005
This handout may be copied and distributed without further
permission,
on the condition that it is not used in any context in which
the WHO code on the marketing of breastmilk substitutes is violated
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