Symptoms
Symptoms of
breast engorgement happen when the breasts produce and
fill with milk but little milk is removed from them. Milk overfills and
engorges the breasts.
If your breasts are engorged, you may notice
the following:
- Breasts are swollen, firm, and painful. If
severely engorged, breasts are very swollen, hard, shiny, warm, and slightly
lumpy to the touch.
- Your nipple may flatten out and the dark area
around the nipple, called the
areola, may be very hard.
- Your baby may have trouble latching on to a
flattened, hard nipple and may not be able to get enough milk out. See a
picture of proper latch-on for breast-feeding
. - If
your baby is not able to get enough milk, he or she will suck harder than usual
during nursing and want to nurse more often.
- Your nipples may
become damaged by your baby's efforts to latch on well and get enough
milk.
- You have a slight fever of around
100°F (37.8°C).
- The
lymph nodes in your armpits may be slightly swollen
and tender.
Complications of engorgement
If you are
breast-feeding and don't relieve breast engorgement, you are likely to develop
one or both of the following:
Call your doctor now if you
have:
- Increasing pain in one area of the
breast.
- Increasing redness in one area of the breast or red streaks
extending away from an area of the breast.
- Drainage of pus from the
nipple or another area of the breast.
- A fever of 101 F (38.5 C) or
higher.
Call your doctor today if you
have:
- Swollen glands (lymph nodes) in the neck or armpit.
- A
fever less than 101 F (38.5 C).
Call your doctor in 24 hours if you have cracked and
bleeding nipples after trying home treatment.
See
help for blocked milk ducts and breast infection (mastitis). For more information, see the topic
Mastitis While Breast-Feeding.
Lawrence RM, Lawrence RA (2004). The breast and
physiology of lactation. In RK Creasy, R Resnik, eds., Maternal-Fetal Medicine, 5th ed., pp. 135–153. Philadelphia:
Saunders.
Smith MK (2000). New perspectives on engorgement. LEAVEN, 35(6): 134–136.