| Last year my DD noticed a breast bud on her left side, but nothing on the other. The pediatrician said this was normal, and the other side would catch up. It's been a year, and the side that had the breast bud is now a small puffy nipple, but the other side hasn't changed. She's only 9 and has been on the late side of all other physical development stages (teeth, hair, etc.), so breast development literally struck me out of the blue last year. (My basis of comparison is her older sister who has been on the early side of things.) We're seeing the doctor tomorrow, but I thought I'd see whether anyone else has experienced something similar and how it turned out. FWIW, I know that most women's breasts are slightly different, as are mine. Just wondering if this was a sign that something is actually wrong, or whether this means her breasts will be drastically different. TIA! |
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How’s her bilateral movement? Does she overly depend on using a dominant hand?
Eg if she’s right handed, right side will be bigger |
?I'm right handed but my left boob is bigger, only slightly. |
| Not to scare you but my breasts never evened out and I ended up getting a very implant in my right breast at age 19. I'm 42 and have never had any issues and never regretted it. Really was a game changer in my confidence. The only thing is my milk supply was lower on my implant side but I would have traded not being able to breastfeed at all for what it did for my self esteem. |
A very small implant * |
+1. |
| very normal |
| There's even a section on in it one of the American Girl books! |
+2. I thought the opposite side from your dominant hand is usually a tiny bit bigger/fatter, whereas the dominant hand side is smaller/leaner because that side gets more exercise. |