Alcohol & Breastfeeding

Juicyg

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Hey everyone,

Now I know this topic has probably been covered a good few times over but I just wanted to know what are the rules with alcohol and breast feeding?

Today I have had 3 glasses of wine and a glass of champagne. I had my first glass at say 1pm and my last at say 4pm.
Now I have already pumped and dumped the milk I had when giving him a bottle at 3.30 and am planning on doing the same in a min.

Can I feed my little man when he wakes up for his feed in the middle of the night? Or will it still be contaminated?

How long does the alcohol take to leave your body/milk?

This is the first time in pretty much a year that I have had more than 1 glass!

Thanks in advance x
 
How old is your little one?

I believe that after 3 months of age, there's not much to worry about unless you're drunk. What I keep hearing is that if you're okay to drive, you're okay to breastfeed.
Before 3 months, you might want to be a little more careful, but I'm not sure what the rule is there.

As for the pump-and-dump, you don't need to do it unless you are uncomfortably engorged. The alcohol will leave your milk at the same time as it leaves your bloodstream.
 
Thanks for that,I kind of thought that was the case. So come 2-3am this eve he will be ok to have my milk again and I wont have to worry about a bottle?

He is 3 months old,14 weeks today.

I like to pump and dump just so that my supply stays up,I'm worried that it will depreciate it if I don't. Have done it now and probably won't pump again now. Unless I can't feed him in the night that is.
X
 
Don't pump and dump, you are fine to feed baby straight from the breast.

Have a read - Dr. Jack Newman.

Relax and feel free to have a couple of drinks. Baby will be absolutely fine.

The following is from a blog by a mother who tested her milk for alcohol. Not one of those useless kits that you can buy at various stores, but tested at a toxicology laboratory. I will copy from her blog the method she used and the results. I think this puts the lie to the notion that women should not drink while breastfeeding or need to "pump and dump" (an appalling term) after having even one drink. The following is an exact quote from her blog:

Method:
First I took a sample of my milk (about 1 mL) prior to drinking any alcoholic beverage. I expressed the milk mid-nursing session to ensure I had a goodly portion of fore & hind milk. After completing the nursing session, I mixed myself an alcoholic beverage consisting of 2 oz of 80 proof (40%) vodka in 10 oz of soda (Sprite). I proceeded to drink the entire 12 oz in about 30 minutes. About 30 minutes after finishing (1 hour after beginning to drink), I expressed some milk (about 1 mL) and labeled it 'immediate'. I then waited 1 hour and expressed more milk (about 1 mL) and labeled it '2 hours'. In the 2 hours (from the beginning), I did not drink any more alcoholic beverages, drink other beverages, or eat any other foods. Another day, 1/2 of a beer (4.3% alcohol) and 2-6 oz glasses of wine were consumed within 1.5 hours. About an hour from the beginning of the last drink, a milk sample (about 1 mL) was taken. This sample was labeled '1 hour - 3 drinks'. Another sample was taken about an hour after that (2 hours after the beginning of the last drink). This sample was labeled '2 hours - 3 drinks'.

The samples were stored in the refrigerator until processing. An Agilent headspace instrument was used to run the tests. Propanol and ethanol standards were also tested to ensure the instrument was within limits. The instrument is maintained by the KSP Lab Toxicology Section and used in forensic determinations of blood and urine alcohol content.

Results:
The sample labeled as 'immediate' registered as 0.1370 mg/mL which correlates to 0.01370% alcohol in the sample. The sample labeled '2 hours' registered as 0.0000 mg/ml which correlates to 0.0000%. The sample labeled '1 hour - 3 drinks' registered as 0.3749 mg/mL which correlates to 0.03749% alcohol in the sample. The sample labeled '2 hours - 3 drinks' registered as 0.0629 mg/mL which correlates to 0.00629% alcohol in the sample.

Conclusion:
The alcohol content in breast milk immediately after drinking is equivalent to a 0.0274 proof beverage. That's like mixing 1 oz of 80 proof vodka (one shot) with 2919 oz of mixer . By the way, 2919 oz is over 70 liters. Two hours after drinking one (strong) drink the alcohol has disappeared from the sample. Completely harmless to the nursing infant. Drinking about 3 drinks in 1.5 hours resulted in higher numbers, but still negligible amounts of alcohol would be transferred to the child. One hour after imbibing in 3 drinks, the milk was the equivalent of 0.07498 proof beverage. That would be like adding 1 oz of 80 proof vodka (one shot) to 1066 oz of mixer (1066 oz is over 26 liters). Two hours after imbibing in 3 drinks, the milk was 0.01258 proof. That would be like adding 1 oz of 80 proof vodka to 3179 oz of mixer (over almost 80 liters). So, even though an infant has much less body weight, any of these percentage of alcohol in breast milk is unlikely to adversely affect the baby. Bottoms up!
 
That's a very interesting study Sue. I've always been somewhat confused by the articles telling you that you must only have a maximum of one small glass of wine, which then go on to state that milk alcohol level seems to parallel blood alcohol.
The amount in blood alcohol is always miniscule - even after a bottle of wine you'd struggle to get blood alcohol to more than 0.1% if you were drinking at a sensible pace (as backed up by your study). Gripe water used to be 3.6% alcohol which I think puts it into perspective. I can only guess the information is put out there as being intoxicated around a baby could lead to countless other problems/incidents, like co-sleeping.
 
Dont waste precious milk by dumping! Alcohol leaves your milk when it leaves your vlood stream, and i follow the rule that if i can drive, i can breastfeed.
 
This is all good to know. My brother gets married on saturday so handy to know I can have a couple of drinks! To be honest, after not drinking in almost 3 years after 2 pregnancies close together, I imagine I'll only have to sniff a cork!!x
 
So happy to see this thread! My LO is almost a month old and I don't want to get hammered but wouldn't mind enjoying a drinks!
 

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