Low Milk Supply: The Causes and The Misconceptions

Many new moms worry they have a poor milk supply, but it can sometimes be hard to know for sure. Sara Chana Silverstein IBCLC advises whether you really have low milk supply and what you can do about it.

Breastfeeding Challenge: Could it be low milk supply?I am bravely, yet confidently, going to make the following statement: Most women CAN produce enough breast milk to exclusively breastfeed their babies.

The concept of “low milk supply” is often a misunderstanding of what is really going on. When women come into my office concerned with a low milk supply, more often than not there is an alternative issue. It could possibly an incorrect latch of the baby onto the breast, or perhaps a baby has a weak suck or suck disorder.

In fact, I would venture to say that if breastfeeding is being managed correctly—which means that the baby has not been trained on a schedule and the mother has mastered a pain-free latch onto the breast—yet she still feels as though she cannot satisfy her baby by nursing alone, then it can be safe to assume the baby is having the issue and not the mom.

This fixable problem is usually in the form of a suck disorder. Suckling disorders can be extra confusing to moms because it seems as if nearly everything is going according to the basic breast feeding protocols. They are breastfeeding without pain and baby appears to be getting milk. The concern blossoms once baby is weighed before and after breastfeeding (on a digital scale that measures ounces). And much to Mom’s dismay, the numbers on the scale have barely moved.

When It’s Most Likely Not a Low Milk Supply Issue

If your breastfeeding challenge is indeed with your baby’s latch or baby’s suckle, most proficient lactation consultants can teach you how to fix the problem. Not to say a magical wand will wipe your problems free, but with the right dedication and some work, a mom with the help of her spouse or partner, can learn how to suck-train her baby.

Once a baby is properly suck-trained, it may indeed seem magical when the numbers begin to jump on the scale before and after the feedings. I don’t want to belittle the hard work some of my clients are challenged with before yielding the cherished results. But in my experience, once a baby is guided on how to suckle properly, the progress for the baby is usually profound and extremely rewarding.

6 Possible Causes Behind Actual Low Milk Supply

There could be many reasons behind your breastfeeding challenges, here’s when the cause could be related to having low milk supply:

1. Insufficient Glandular Tissue

This is a condition in which the straw-like tubes in the breast that carry the milk, called ducts, never grew properly during adolescence. This means that the breasts were never properly formed, and even with the use of herbs and supplements, excess pumping, or in the event that it were possible to place the baby on the breast twenty-four hours a day for seven days a week, this woman will never produce more milk.

This is a true breast condition, and here are a few very clear signs to help identify insufficient glandular tissue:

  • The breasts are asymmetrical—although all women have slightly different shaped breasts, in this case one breast is noticeably larger or different than the other in shape and size; the breasts are situated so widely apart on the body, that the woman does not have cleavage; and occasionally the breasts will be triangular in shape and pointing downward, or tubular in shape.
  • Another significant clue is that the breasts do not grow or change shape very much during pregnancy, as would be expected, and they do not appear to fill up with milk on the third day postpartum.

With this condition the quality of the breastmilk is fine; it is the quantity that is missing.

In general, my clients with this breast condition will be able to teach their babies to accept the amount of milk the mother can supply. And they will be supplemented in the first few weeks via the technique of finger-feeding the baby through a dropper. This is to ensure the baby is getting enough nutrients. After six weeks, when the baby has learned the breastfeeding routine and is proficient, we introduce a bottle. Each case will be different and will require supervision by a professional to make sure that the infant is gaining enough weight.

2. Retained Placenta

This means that part of the placenta or fragments of its membranes are left behind in the uterus after delivery. If small fragments of placenta or membrane are retained, the body’s signal to trigger the release of hormones necessary to produce milk will not be properly activated, often causing low milk supply.

A woman with this condition will usually begin to bleed suddenly and very profusely after the expected bleeding from childbirth has slowed down. Women usually get very frightened by this sudden flow of blood, but the good news is that this is the body’s natural way to flush out any remnants of placenta. And afterward the woman usually feels her breasts filling up with milk. Sometimes women with this condition will require a DNC to clean out her uterus.

3. C-Sections

C-sections often delay the arrival of a woman’s natural milk supply until her fifth day postpartum. This is unlike women who experience vaginal birth, whose milk comes in by the third day.

I wish more women who give birth by Cesarean section would be informed of this, so they can feed their babies in alternative ways, including finger-feeding pumped colostrum, spoon or cup feeding, as they are waiting for their milk.

Occasionally, C-section babies can suffer from a problem known as nipple confusion. This could be a result of spending time in the nursery where they are fed exclusively by bottle.

The consequence of nipple confusion is that many babies are either unable or unwilling to take the breast properly, even after the milk has come in. Fortunately this problem can be solved through a combination of patience, teaching the baby to take the breast and employing a technique called breast compression. Breast compression helps stimulate a functional nursing rhythm at the breast, through the mother’s timed compression and release of her breast during nursing.

4. Low Thyroid Levels

Low thyroid levels will cause many women to struggle with milk production. Testing for low thyroid levels can be controversial, because blood work can reveal levels that appear to be within the normal range. However, when these same women are treated for hypothyroidism, they experience an increase in their breastmilk production.

If your blood levels appear fine, and a lactation consultant has judged your baby to be nursing properly, but you are still not producing enough milk, another way to check your thyroid function is with a basal thermometer. This method of testing is done by taking your temperature every morning when you first wake up—preferably before you move. If your temperature is lower than 97.4 degrees Fahrenheit, chances are your milk may increase with some thyroid boosting medications or supplements.

Women who are already taking Synthroid, a thyroid drug, during their pregnancies must get their levels checked right after birth because their need for more of less of the medication may change postpartum.

5. Hashimoto Disease

This condition is an autoimmune disease that affects the thyroid.  With this condition the immune system makes antibodies that damage thyroid cells and interfere with their ability to make thyroid hormone.

Hashimoto’s disease can be hard to diagnose during pregnancy because a normal pregnancy and Hashimato often have the same symptoms, including weight gain, and fatigue. And postpartum women have been known to present with swelling of the thyroid, or a pre-Hashimato condition, but happily this is only a temporary state. However, if you test positive for this condition, medications such as Levothyroxine work well, and often can help the woman begin to produce breastmilk.  Working with a medical doctor and a lactation consultant is important with this condition.

6. Sheehan Syndrome

This rare syndrome is a condition that happens after the woman has lost a lot of blood, following the birth of her child. Blood loss that exceeds the normal range for vaginal birth—up to 500 cc, or for Cesarean birth—up to 1,000 cc, can place a mother at risk for this condition. This amount of blood loss can stop her pituitary gland from functioning normally. And the pituitary gland is responsible for secreting the milk-making hormones.

Other signs of Sheehan syndrome besides low milk supply can be excessive sleepiness, hair loss, low blood pressure, hypoglycemia, weakness and dizziness, hoarse voice, joint pain, abdominal pain, and constipation.

Thankfully, this is, often, only a temporary condition. And it can be treated by setting up a pumping schedule and by eating a lot of healthy foods including vegetables and other nutrient dense foods. But it also has to be managed by a medical professional. Sheehan syndrome is rare, but often overlooked by the medical profession.

Knowledge is Power

The good news is that these problems are rare and often misdiagnosed. Typically most breastfeeding problems come from poor management, improper latch, or suckling issues. And these things are easy to fix with diligent compliance.

Once you’ve identified the cause of your low milk supply, you may find these herbs for increasing milk supply helpful.

 

Image by Crystal Keyes Photography

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3 Comments

  1. Jessica Marques says:

    I had severe low milk supply issues and tried lots of remedies to continue breastfeeding my little baby but nothing worked unless I started drinking Healthy nursing tea. It boosted my milk production sufficiently.

  2. I remember reading something about that breast malformation one when I was pregnant and being worried that because that sounds so much like me that I wouldn’t be able to breastfeed again (my older son couldn’t) but I forgot all about it until now. My son is now 9 1/2 months old and while 8lbs 9 oz at birth, has just hit 17lbs. I am wondering how that is diagnosed, if there is a way to truly know if my breasts are the issue? I’ve always been self conscious of them because they are so far apart that nothing, even push up, push together bras can get them to make cleavage and they have always pointed down, which makes it more difficult than it seems for others to nurse in any position other than the football hold, unless I’m laying down. Is this something any doctor would be able to look at and diagnose or does it require an ultrasound or some other test? Thank you for any more information 🙂

  3. Most of the moms I know who are struggling with low supply are working moms who have trouble pumping enough milk to have a caretaker feed baby via bottle while they are at work. I fall into this category as well. It’s hard to see so many articles saying “moms think they have low supply but really they don’t.” Sure, if I was able to be at home with my baby 100% of the time, my supply wouldn’t be an issue. But trying to pump enough to fulfill his needs while we are apart is the problem.