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PBL Foundations


  • What causes nipple pain when you're breastfeeding or lactating and there's no visible break in the skin (though there may be redness and swelling)?
  • What causes visible nipple damage (cracks, ulcers, bruising, or other wounds) when you're breastfeeding or lactating?
  • Your baby's tongue doesn't cause friction, pinching, or compression during breastfeeding
  • Does your baby have tongue-tie or other oral connective tissue or fascial restrictions resulting in breastfeeding problems?
  • Is nipple pain and damage caused by your nipple height or your breast anatomy?
  • Is your nipple pain explained by high vacuums in your baby's mouth?
  • Do teats and pacifiers affect baby's suck and cause nipple pain?
  • Does thrush infection cause breast or nipple pain when you're breastfeeding?
  • What are the most common causes of nipple pain and damage when you're breastfeeding an older baby or child (with a word about teeth)?

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  • PBL Foundations
  • S7: Nipple pain and damage
  • CH 3: What causes nipple pain and damage?

Is nipple pain and damage caused by your nipple height or your breast anatomy?

Dr Pamela Douglas6th of Jul 202413th of Jan 2026

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Many different elements of your and your baby's anatomy interact together in breastfeeding

You and your baby are a biological system, with myriad different elements of the system interacting together during breastfeeding. Anatomic variations are just one part of the picture. If there's one thing that characterises both mother and baby anatomies in breastfeeding, it's just how variable we are as humans!

It seems to me that the current tendency to pathologise anatomic diversity and blame either the mother's or baby’s anatomy for breastfeeding problems has come about because our health systems lack effective clinical approaches which stabilise baby at the breast across the whole range of glorious anatomic diversities which are normal for humans!

Some anatomic variations have been linked with more breastfeeding problems

It's true that some anatomic variations of breast size and nipple height, though poorly defined, have been shown to have links with breastfeeding problems including nipple pain. These handful of preliminary studies suggest links between lower nipple height and larger breast size with breastfeeding problems. You can find out about these four studies here.

To my mind, though, these studies simply demonstrate how important it is for women to have strategies which eliminate breast tissue drag and help baby draw up as much breast tissue as possible into her mouth, regardless of our glorious human anatomic variability!

Recommended resources

Is baby having trouble coming onto your breast because your nipples are 'flat'?

The shape of women's breasts and nipple-areolar complexes comprise a glorious spectrum of anatomic trait variation. So do certain maternal anatomic variations cause breastfeeding difficulties?

Working breasts are diverse on the outside

Nipples and areolas enjoy diverse size, shape, colour; nipples look in many different directions!

Anatomic factors which interact to affect how your baby sucks at the breast: an overview

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Next up in What causes nipple pain and damage?

Is your nipple pain explained by high vacuums in your baby's mouth?

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Babies of women experiencing nipple pain have higher peak vacuum pressures in their mouths while breastfeeding compared to babies of women who aren't experiencing pain. The Human Lactation Research Group found that two-thirds of women with persistent nipple pain despite standard fit and hold interventions by International Board Certified Lactation Consultants had stronger vacuums while breastfeeding compared to babies whose mothers didn't have pain.

This finding has been interpreted as showing that some babies must naturally generate very high negative suction pressures, which are more likely to damage their mothers.

But that theory doesn’t take into account the highly dynamic nature of the physical or mechanical interaction between mother and baby during breastfeeding.

In Possums Breastfeeding &…

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Possums acknowledges the traditional owners of the lands upon which The Possums Programs have been created, the Yuggera and Turrbal Peoples. We acknowledge that First Nations have breastfed, slept with, and lovingly raised their children on Australian lands for at least 65,000 years, to become the oldest continuous living culture on Earth. Possums stands with the Uluru Statement from the Heart.