Breast milk can turn into a pinkish color due to colonization by Serratia marcescens, a species of rod-shaped gram-negative bacteria that produce a reddish-orange tripyrrole pigment called prodigiosin1 that has been related to a variety of diseases and even newborn deaths.
“Pink or light red milk is safe to feed your baby. Bright red milk caused by an active bleed is also safe, but it's difficult to digest and might cause your baby to throw up,” Leibson told Today Parents. According to Verywell Family, breast milk is usually yellow, white, cream, clear, tan or tinted blue.
Blood in breast milk is just one of several symptoms associated with mastitis (inflammation of the breast tissue). Typically, nursing mothers with this condition get tender or painful breasts, as well as swelling, lumps, or fever.
Can breast milk change color? Yes. As your body goes from producing colostrum to transitional milk to mature milk, your milk can go from yellow-tinted or orangey to white or bluish. It doesn't indicate a problem and simply has to do with the milk's changing composition.
It's normal for your breast milk to vary in color day-to-day, and even be tinged with various colors like blue, green, or pink.
But the mastitis may also include other signs, like these: Flu-like symptoms like fever, chills, body aches, nausea, vomiting, or fatigue. Yellowish discharge from the nipple that looks like colostrum. Breasts that feel tender, warm, or hot to the touch and appear pink or red.
Some people describe a “soapy” smell or taste in their milk after storage; others say it is a “metallic” or “fishy” or “rancid” odor. Some detect a “sour” or “spoiled” odor or taste. Accompanying these changes are concerns that the milk is no longer good for the baby.
There are basically two reasons that a mother's milk is red. Sometimes a small rupture in a blood capillary in the nipple or the breast may turn milk pink. The second reason is a bacterium called Serratia marsescens. With blood, there's not much you can do about its presence in milk except ignore it.
Seeing blood in your milk may be alarming at first, however it is not harmful to babies, and if you experience it you can continue breastfeeding – in most cases it will stop within a few days. If it does not cease, or if you are at all concerned, consult your healthcare provider.
You may be alarmed to find that you've suddenly pumped “strawberry milk” for your baby. Red or pink breast milk usually indicates that some blood has mixed in with the milk. According to RN and IBCLC lactation consultant Shantel Harlin, “Generally, blood in breast milk is not a contraindication for feeding your baby.
Mastitis usually only affects 1 breast, and symptoms often come on quickly. They include: a swollen area on your breast that may feel hot and painful to touch – the area may become red but this can be harder to see if you have black or brown skin. a wedge-shaped breast lump or a hard area on your breast.
Signs and symptoms of mastitis often develop quickly and can include: sore breasts that feel swollen, hot, painful to touch. You may also have red patches, but redness can be harder to see on brown and black skin.
Strawberry milk is the result of injury, trauma, or infection of the breast and nipple resulting in blood being transferred with the breast milk during pumping or nursing.
You may notice some spotting (light bleeding) at first. If you have irregular periods while breastfeeding, such as continued spotting, heavier than normal bleeding or long cycles, it is a good idea to talk to your doctor because there may be other causes apart from breastfeeding.
The appearance of red / rosy colouration indicates the presence of Sodium bi-carbonate in the milk.
Freshly expressed or pumped milk can be stored: At room temperature (77°F or colder) for up to 4 hours. In the refrigerator for up to 4 days. In the freezer for about 6 months is best; up to 12 months is acceptable.
The color of breast milk is usually yellow, white, clear, cream, tan, or blue-tinged. However, at some point during your breastfeeding experience, you may be surprised to find that your breast milk can be other colors as well. You may notice that the color of your breast milk changes over time.
It's safe to continue breast-feeding if you have mastitis. Breast-feeding actually helps clear the infection. Weaning your baby abruptly is likely to worsen your signs and symptoms. Your doctor might refer you to a lactation consultant for help and ongoing support.
Mothers who express milk notice that their milk might have a deeper yellow appearance when their infants are ill.
Human milk separates after expression (Figure 1) and needs to be remixed before feeding. Unsurprisingly, this is another place where there is plenty of advice given to mothers. And the advice is surprisingly strict: swirl, never shake.
If your body is producing milk, there is no way for it to spoil in the breast, according to the New Jersey Department of Health. This is because it is not a stagnant product of your body. “Breast milk is a living organism, unlike the pasteurized cow's milk that we purchase at the store.
Your doctor can diagnose mastitis based on a physical exam. The fever and chills give it away, as does a red, wedge-shaped area on the breast that points toward the nipple.
Usually occurs within the first six weeks of breastfeeding, but can occur anytime. Often starts with engorgement. May occur the first time your baby sleeps through the night and/or goes an unusually long time between feedings. Onset is sudden with intense pain in one breast, rarely in both breasts.
Does Breast Milk Stain Fabrics? Absolutely. Breast milk contains proteins your growing baby needs. Those same proteins leave a yellowish stain on baby clothes, blankets, and burp cloths.