Attention to breast development
First, how to prevent pre-cooking? (1) Refrain from eating supplements such as food ginseng, beehive mackerel, swallow nests, pollen, glue, placental health products, etc. (2) The avoidance of food consumption is not a “higher” supplement or oral fluid issued by a specialist. (3) Avoid eating fried foods, and excessive calorie can be converted into excess fat in infants and young children, and body fat can easily contribute to pre-cooking. (4) Pregnant women and nursing mothers do not use sex hormone-containing supplements and skin-care items, infants and young children refrain from using skin-protected substances with sexual hormones, and young parents who take contraceptives should place them where the child cannot get them. (5) Avoiding the use of light during sleep, when too much light shines into the eyes of a child, leading to a reduction in the pine-bearing demoxin, causing sleep disorders, which may lead to early osteoporosis and induced early preparation. (6) Avoiding early contact with love films or love novels as much as possible, and long-term contact with such works will stimulate the child ‘ s sexual development centre and lead to early sexual initiation. (7) Reduce the impact of environmental factors. Avoiding the use of infant and young child products containing endocrine disrupting chemicals with estrogen activity, common such as diazine, binol A (BPA), phthalate diphenyl-2-ethylhexyl (DEHP, a plasticizer) and lead; and avoiding exposure to detergents, pesticides, plastics, substances released to the environment from the plastic industry and their decomposition, which may lead to early adolescence.
(b) Second, the treatment of early breast development alone; studies have shown that early breast development in infants and young children, especially those under the age of 2, is generally benign, with most cases being self-restricted, and most of the development of breasts receded within one year; However, it also has the potential to turn into a central pre-pregnancy, with a probability of 13%-20%, and therefore requires a long-term follow-up visit to provide a comprehensive understanding of the natural pathology of children suffering from typical early breast development, the characteristics of the transition and possible influences, in the event of vaginal haemorrhage, masmosis and cortex colours, as well as to provide guidance on clinical norms.