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Don't bring home the bacon. Some women placed on a relatively lean diet, with no more than 20 percent of calories from fat, have reported that it seems to help relieve the pain in lumpy breasts. You can significantly reduce fat in your diet by avoiding fatty meats, oils and dairy products. Substitute fruits, vegetables and whole grains whenever possible. And if you eat wheat bran, there's an added plus: This type of fiber reduces estrogen, the hormone that stimulates breast tissue. Get support. No, not the touchy-feely kind--the Maidenform kind. Find a good, sturdy sports bra, suggests California nurse Kerry McGinn, R.N., author of The Informed Woman's Guide to Breast Health. When you try on a bra for fit, do some running in place in the changing room--and get the bra that minimizes bounce. "You want a bra that holds you firmly and comfortably, without biting and binding," McGinn says. Try heat, ice or both. A warm bath or shower or a heating pad relieves pain for some women, McGinn says. Others find respite with anything cool--an ice pack wrapped in a towel, or fingertips chilled in cold water. And some women find alternating between a heating pad and an ice pack works best for them, McGinn says. Do a soap massage. "Soap your breasts well in the bath or shower, and then move your fingers gently in small circles all over each breast," McGinn suggests. (The circles should be about the size of a coin.) Then, holding your hands vertically on each side of one breast, gently press in and up to raise the breast. This helps move fluid out of the breast and into the lymph ducts under the arms and around the collarbone, where it can be transported out of the body. Take a multivitamin/mineral supplement. Among the vitamins and minerals that may have some benefits are vitamin A, the B-complex vitamins, vitamin E, iodine and selenium, according to Susan Lark, M.D., medical director of the PMS and Menopause Self-Help Center in Los Altos, California. Adds Dr. Rose: "It's a shotgun approach that has not been studied in clinical trials, but it can't do any harm at safe dosages, and it might help." Exercise every day. An hour of aerobic exercise daily can make a difference. Studies have shown that exercise helps reduce premenstrual water retention and thus ease the pain of swollen breasts. If running or even walking causes pain (even when you're wearing a well-fitting sports bra), try biking or swimming. Shed excess pounds. The more body fat a woman carries around, the higher her blood levels of estrogen. And since estrogen is the hormone that stimulates breast tissue, "losing some weight does seem like a reasonable thing to do," says Dr. Rose.
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