They're always hanging around -- but
most of us rarely give them a second thought. A science journalist
exposes the impressive, eye-popping facts about breastsand breast
health.
Human breasts are different from all the other breasts on the planet.
Humans
are the only mammals to have breasts that develop in puberty and then
remain permanently enlarged, says Florence Williams, the author of Breasts: A Natural and Unnatural History.
Other female primates have them when necessary (i.e., their mammary
glands grow during lactation and deflate after weaning). Ours, fleshy
and fatty, "stick around regardless of our reproductive status," she
says.
Compared to our other organs, they're late bloomers.
Williams
was fascinated to learn that our breasts are the last organ in our
bodies to develop. Unlike, say, the brain or liver, whose architecture
is set at birth, breasts don't really come into their own until well
after birth. "The breast has to fully build itself out of nothing during
puberty," she says. "Even if a woman never gets pregnant, her breasts
pack and unpack a little bit each month, just in case." Over the course
of a menstrual cycle, breast volume varies by 13.6 percent, owing to
water retention and cell growth. (The average breast weighs just over a
pound, but this can double in late pregnancy.)
They're different from each other.
If
you were secretly dismayed to discover that you don't fill out both
sides of your bikini top in exactly the same way, take heart: Williams
found that one breast is usually, on average, 39.7 milliliters bigger
than the other (that's nearly a fifth of a cup). This makes sense, she
says -- we don't expect to have two feet, two ears or two knees that are
exactly the same.
They likely enabled us to communicate on a higher, more complex level.
Olav
Oftedal, Ph.D., a Smithsonian researcher, told Williams that
higher-order thinking -- including speech and learning -- grew out of
lactation because mothers and offspring had to bond and be close. Other
scientists believe that the shape of the human breast influenced the
development of our infants’ palates and oral motor skills, which then
facilitated our ability to form words.
They can also cause men to regress.
Research
has shown that men perform poorly on cognitive tests after viewing
images of top-heavy women. Steven M. Platek, a neuroscientist at Georgia
Gwinnett College who has conducted experiments in this area, thinks
that men were so distracted by the pictures that they couldn't focus on
other tasks.
They probably evolved to keep everyone happy.
Many
people figure that this uber-feminine characteristic evolved through
sexual selection -- or because well-endowed women mated more often and
with more-virile partners, increasing the likelihood that the trait
would be passed along. But Williams points out that this origin theory
brings up more questions (like, why are breasts at their fullest and
firmest when women are pregnant and lactating, when they're effectively
off the market?). She interviewed proponents of a newer hypothesis: that
our breasts evolved through natural selection -- or because they did
more for women than boost their attractiveness. Here's how Williams
breaks it down: "We needed to be fatter at puberty and beyond to produce
human infants; our fat made estrogen, and estrogen made our breasts
grow because the tissues there are so attuned to it." According to this
reasoning, breasts are merely "byproducts of fat deposition," but that
fat is key to the survival of a species like ours that lacks hair for
warmth (and that needs extra fat to grow a big-brained baby). It's
tricky to prove which theory is right, says Williams, because the soft
tissue of breasts leave no fossil record, but we're partial to the more
egalitarian one.
They're arriving earlier than ever before.
Breasts
are appearing, on average, a full year sooner than they did in
generations past, says Williams. You've probably heard that this is due
to the rise in obesity, but Williams says that's only part of the
problem. "Thin girls are also developing at a younger age," she says.
One theory points to the chemicals that mimic estrogen in food and
personal-care products. The Breast Cancer Fund suggests avoiding BPA
(the plastic additive in the lining of cans) and using paraben-free
beauty products whenever possible.
They're brimming with goodness…
Human
breast milk starts out as nature's perfect food, says Williams,
chock-full of not only the vitamins, minerals, proteins and fat a baby
needs to grow but also immunity-boosting antibodies, probiotics and
other substances that can protect against salmonella and E. coli, as
well as diabetes and cancer. It also contains endocannabinoids similar
to those found in marijuana, which may help infants chill out and avoid
overeating.
…as well as not-so-goodness.
In
a cruel twist of fate, the helpfully fatty tissue in the breasts also
causes them to absorb "pollutants like a pair of soft sponges," says
Williams. Modern breasts are storing potentially toxic chemicals such as
flame retardants, pesticides, PCBs, mercury, lead, rocket fuel,
gasoline byproducts, fungicides and more. We can hold on to some of them
for years -- even decades. The high-fat, high-protein content of the
milk also attracts heavy metals and other contaminants, and nursing
mothers can pass these along to their babies (this doesn't cancel out
breast milk's other amazing properties, though). Williams cites a 2011
report by the Institute of Medicine of the National Academies
recommending that all women reduce their exposure to gasoline fumes,
vehicle exhaust and cigarette smoke.
They're particularly vulnerable to cancer.
More
than 1.3 million women were diagnosed with breast cancer in 2008,
according to Williams, and that number is expected to increase by 26
percent by 2020. She says that there are three reasons cancer seems to
thrive in our breasts: These dynamic organs keep growing new cells
throughout our lives; the fatty tissue is like a haven for industrial
chemicals; and they're filled with hormone receptors and hormones that
can feed cancer cells. ("The tumors grow in the presence of estrogen and
progesterone," says Williams.) She adds that this news underscores the
importance of following the Institute of Medicine's advice for
minimizing environmental risk factors: exercise, limit smoking and
alcohol, and avoid unnecessary radiation.
By Corrie Pikul
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