Many women think that if their breasts don’t hurt or itch, they don’t have a disease, but that’s not true. Most breast diseases have no obvious symptoms in their early stages and can only be effectively prevented by women checking themselves or going to the hospital for regular checkups.
Breasts are a woman’s second feature and a key part of her breast milk. If a lesion occurs, it should be treated promptly or it will cause many complications and the mom-to-be cannot breastfeed her baby at this time. If you have breast disease and your baby consumes milk from a person with the disease, the baby will be infected, which can affect the normal development of the baby and lead to serious lesions in severe cases.
Causes of breast disease
1. Excessive intensity of sexual life
As women nowadays lead a relatively early sexual life, there is no more mature knowledge of health care. Many young women do not pay attention to the strength of the couple’s life for the sake of the pleasure at the time, there is excessive ravaging of the breasts, which in the long run is prone to breast disease.
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2. Never breastfeeding
As society has changed and women’s perceptions have changed, there are more and more leftover women and women are getting married relatively late, so most women rarely breastfeed or even never breastfeed, and they don’t keep their mammary glands open. The risk of breast cancer is not prevented, but rather, the risk of breast cancer is greatly increased.
What women should do to check themselves
The time to check your breasts is usually within a week after your period, preferably before you go to bed and after you take a shower: put one hand behind your head, put three fingers of your other hand flat on your breast, feel around for hard lumps or bumps, then move to your armpit and gently squeeze your nipple to see if there is any juice coming out. Then move to the armpit and gently squeeze the nipple to see if there is any juice coming out. The whole process takes only a few minutes and is checked once a month.
A few minutes a month can go a long way toward preventing and detecting breast disease. The self-examination methods described above are simple and easy to use, and I hope they will help you.