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  #1  
Old 01-26-2012, 03:55 PM
Sir T-Cups Sir T-Cups is offline
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Breast reductions and having children

A friend of mine has really big boobs in general, much less for her age. In her early 20s she has natural Es and is by no means a big girl. It will probably come to eventually that she will need to have a reduction surgery, but she also wants to have kids and will breastfeed. Is it healthy/ok/medically feasable to have the surgery BEFORE having the kids and everything still being ok? Or is it better to wait until after children to have the surgery done? Or doesn't it matter either way??
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  #2  
Old 01-26-2012, 06:30 PM
Mama Zappa Mama Zappa is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Sir T-Cups View Post
A friend of mine has really big boobs in general, much less for her age. In her early 20s she has natural Es and is by no means a big girl. It will probably come to eventually that she will need to have a reduction surgery, but she also wants to have kids and will breastfeed. Is it healthy/ok/medically feasable to have the surgery BEFORE having the kids and everything still being ok? Or is it better to wait until after children to have the surgery done? Or doesn't it matter either way??
Reduction can make it difficult / impossible to breastfeed. That's something she'll want to ask around about, and also discuss with the surgeon who would be doing her surgery.

I just googled "breastfeeding after breast reduction" and got a lot of hits - including the first one which is bfar.org! (I haven't clicked on the site, it's conceivable it's NSFW if it's a really uptight workplace).
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Old 01-26-2012, 07:51 PM
VOW VOW is offline
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Obviously, that is something to be discussed with the surgeon.

Keep in mind, though, that pregnancy involves increasing breast size, and breastfeeding increases breast size even more.

The early breast reductions were a relatively simple, "cut off the excess" and then tack the nipple in the right spot.

The current procedure involves keeping the nipple, the milk glands, and the nerves intact, and reducing excess tissue. In order for the finished product to be esthetically pleasing, this is quite detailed and requires skill.

Because of back pain and skin problems, breast reduction surgery is often covered by insurance.


~VOW
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Old 01-27-2012, 05:58 PM
Sir T-Cups Sir T-Cups is offline
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Thanks for the responses everyone....these answers are pretty much what I expected too.

Cool that if you can get a doctor to sign off for it it can maybe get covered by insurance!!
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Old 01-27-2012, 09:13 PM
Sailboat Sailboat is offline
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Interesting username/topic combination.
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Old 01-28-2012, 07:20 PM
Sir T-Cups Sir T-Cups is offline
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Originally Posted by Sailboat View Post
Interesting username/topic combination.
Ahahahah.


That's funny...I didn't even think of that.
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