The real use of female Breast for Lactation

While pregnancy prepares the breasts for lactation, it does not trigger
the production of milk. During pregnancy the breasts usually become
larger as the number and size of the alveoli glands increases as a
result of increased estrogen levels. After delivery, an infant stast
nursing then after actual milk production begins.
For the first few days after birth of child, the breasts release colostrum,
which is important to a baby's health. When a baby starts sucking
on a woman's nipple, the resulting physical stimulation causes nerve
impulses to be sent to the hypothalamus gland in the brain which in
turn tells the pituitary gland, also located in the brain, to release
two hormones called oxytocin and prolactin. Prolactin causes milk
to be produced and oxytocin causes muscle fibers that surround the
alveoli to constrict, as well as the muscles of the uterus.
When the muscle fibers around the alveoli constrict causing milk to
be secreted it is referred to as "let-down" and can result
in intense sensations within the breasts and the squirting of milk
from the nipples. The sound of a crying baby can also trigger let-down,
indicating how milk production is influenced by psychological conditions
as well as actual nursing. Between feedings some milk, foremilk, is
stored in the alveoli and lactiferous sinuses but the majority of
the milk, hindmilk, is produced on demand. The breasts do not store
milk, but rather produce it based on demand. The greater the demand,
the more they produce, instant and fresh. The breasts should never
be compared to milk bottles!
Each breast is made up of fifteen to twenty lobes of glandular tissue.
The number of lobes is not related to the size of the breast. Each
lobe is made up of thousands of tiny glands. These glands are connected
together by a series of ducts, much like grapes on a vine. The alveoli
glands produce milk during lactation after delivery of child from
mother’s uterus-cervix-vagina. Each lobe feeds into a single
lactiferous duct that travels out through the nipple. As a result
there are fifteen to twenty passages through the nipple, resulting
in just as many openings in the nipple. Behind the nipple the lactiferous
ducts enlarge slightly to form small reservoir called lactiferous
sinuses. Fatty and connective tissues surround the lobes of glandular
tissue. The amount of fatty tissue is depended on many factors including
age, percentage of body fat, and heredity. Ligaments connect the chest
wall to the skin of the breast, giving the breast its shape and elasticity.
By Adolescence
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