Yes and no. generally when a large breasted woman is coming into her milk, she may have more milk then a woman with small breasts, who is also coming into her milk. This generally settles down when feeding schedules have been more established and the milk production has settled into the supply and demand routine. There will only be as much milk as is needed in the breasts due to the entire concept of supply and demand, So if a heavy demand is placed on the breasts, then bigger breasts may have more milk in them then small breasts, but this is overly dependent, as i said, on the demand. A woman with twins, for instance, will produce more milk then a woman with only one baby, and this is between women with the same sized breasts. The more milk taken from the breast during a feeding, the faster it will be produced to replenish it. So the real answer is, Yes, but commonly, No. No. Not at all. I have fairly small breasts and have always produced an over-abundance of milk. I know plenty of large-breasted women who struggle with milk production.
The nursing baby actually determines the amount. This is true, but only if the baby is thoroughly and frequently removing the milk. Breasts respond to the amount of milk being removed and how often it is being removed. Women can make plenty of milk to feed twins. We run into problems with milk production when the baby receives something other than its own mother's milk. This short changes the message to the brain to make the full amount of milk the baby is actually drinking. Sleepy babies during the first few days may keep falling asleep at the breast and therefore aren't removing all of the available milk. Then the baby gets sleepier or fussier and moms start to think (or are convinced by others) that she is not making enough milk to feed her baby. Remove the milk frequently and thoroughly. If baby is not doing this, then mom needs to hand express and/or pump to remove the milk and feed it to the baby until the baby is doing a great job by herself.
No, Breastmilk production is an autonomous response to hormones produced by the body as a result of suckling on the breast.
Typically the average woman will continue to produce milk for as long as she breast feeds. In some cultures, women breast feed until the child is 2-3 years old.
Ussaly yes.
The latitudinal extent in India is advantageous to women as it produces a more mild climate zone, which is much better for the breast to produce breast milk in order for a child to breast feed.
No. Female humans do not have the capacity to produce that much milk. Humans are not cows.
the more you let your baby breastfeed, the more chances of milk coming out.
No, breast milk is made by supply and demand. That very full filling when breast milk first comes in doesn't last long.
Depends on the size of the breast and how pregant or how long after baby is born, the woman is.
If your breast are full and will not release the milk, or "let down", it generally means you are engorged. A technique for alleviating the buildup of pressure from engorged breasts it to alternate between hot and cold compresses. Many women also find a hot shower with gentle manipulation can help to start the flow of milk. The key to preventing engorgement is not allowing too much time to pass in between feedings or pumping.
it actually depends on how much you breast feed your baby. if you breast feed on a regular basis your milk will produce up to 5 years tops. so basicly the more you breast feed the more milk you produce
Most women do not start to produce milk until 2 or 3 days after birth so at the moment you will not be producing any milk at all. For the first few days the baby gets colostrum, which is nutrient and antibody rich and all that they need until your milk comes in. Some women leak colostrum throughout their pregnancy, some don't - it is no indication of breastfeeding success. Similarly, some women experience no change in breast size throughout pregnancy or breastfeeding. This does not mean you will not have enough breast milk for your baby. The breast produces milk on a supply and demand basis, so once your baby is born and starts to suckle at the breast you will will begin to produce as much milk as your baby needs. Breast size is no indicator of the volume of mammary glands but more frequently just a result of a difference in the amount of fatty tissue, which has no bearing on the quantity of milk produced by a nursing mother. Us smaller cupped moms can feed our babies just as well as those with large breasts!
Because God gave women breasts to nurse their children, breast milk is much much better for your baby than anything else you could give it.For several reasons, one because the baby gets more nutrients from breast milk since it isn't processed like formula milk. Another reason is some mom's don't believe in formula milk.
Milk will go back into your breasts. For example keep adding milk to the bowl and the breast pump will pump so much milk into your breast that it will explode!
You may have hyperprolactinemia where your pituitary gland is producing too much of the hormone which makes you produce milk. You need to see a doctor as it may be a symptom of something serious. you can breast feed
Answer: You need to train/pump your breast-muscles, do that every day for as long as you like, the muscles will grow and your breast will appear larger. You can also drink hops-free beer, you will not get drunk since it got no hops in it but it will give your breast much more liquid. Pregnant women drink the hops-fee beer to make more milk but it also works wonders on the not-pregnant women´s breast, and no it will not make milk in you unless your pregnant.