Production of human milk
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Mother’s
milk is composed of 90% water. It
is rich in protein of a high nutritional value, and also in vitamins
(not
vitamin K which is given as a complement and is necessary for clotting,
to
prevent bleeding). It contains lipids (mostly polyunsaturated fatty
acids,
including linoleic acid), mineral salts and sugar. Woman’s milk
contains all
the nutritional elements the baby needs, in balanced proportions.
It has an
anti-infective power against
numerous germs, thanks to the white blood cells it contains. In
mother’s milk
we can find many antiviral antibodies and specific antibodies for
streptococcus. Milk protracts the time of natural immunity from many
diseases
and helps the development of “good” intestinal bacteria (lactobacillus
bifidus).
Mother’s
milk offers a defence against
allergies, namely allergies to different proteins carried into the body
through
artificial nourishment. There is no intolerance to mother’s milk,
except some
cases of intolerance to lactose.
The
composition of mother’s milk changes
to adapt to the baby’s needs and age. So we have three different types
of milk:
o
colostrum:
a thick and yellowish liquid, richer in anti-infective substances than
mother’s
milk. It defends the baby when particularly vulnerable during the first
days of
life, and helps it to eliminate the first faeces thanks to colostrum
laxative
power. Colostrum is produced from the first to the sixth day of the
baby’s
life;
o
transitional
phase milk: produced from the seventh to the fourteenth
day;
o
mature
milk from the fifteenth day.
A woman who
delivers prematurely produces
milk different from that of a woman who delivers at term; she will
produce the
right milk for her premature baby.
Mother’s
milk changes colour and
substance. The composition changes during the sucking: for example it
is very
diluted at the beginning of the sucking (transparent and sometimes with
a
bluish colour) and then becomes thicker with a white or yellow colour.
Its
lipids content increases four times from the beginning of the sucking.
The baby
feels satisfied and controls its appetite. The baby sucks only the
quantity of
milk it needs. The milk also changes during the day: for example the
concentration of lipids is different during the day compared to the
night.