Breasts: They donât do anything to help your running. They just hitch a ride and get in the wayârequiring their own special equipment and in some cases, causing discomfort.
In a 2013 study of female runners at the London Marathon, 32 percent said they experienced occasional pain in their breasts. Of those, 17 percent sometimes cut back on their training because of breast pain.
But the news is not all bad. Researchers continue to study breast motion during sports, bra technology is improving all the time, and evidence is growing that running is one of the best things you can do to protect yourself from breast cancer.
Hereâs what scientists knowâand what runners should, tooâabout taking care of your pair.
âDepending on the size, they can be very heavy,â says Andrea Cheville, M.D., physical medicine and rehabilitation researcher and director of the Cancer Rehabilitation Program at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. âThe body doesnât support them very well. Thereâs not much to keep them stable and immobilized.â Just your skin and a few ligaments.
Other parts of the body are luckier. âIf you think of something like the abdominal fascia, itâs just incredibly strong,â Cheville says. âYou can run and your insides donât jiggle around, because we have a strong, fibrous envelope. But thatâs not true of the breasts. They have essentially no support. And yet they have pain receptors. And when the limited support elements are stretched, that hurts.â
Michelle Norris, senior research associate in the department of sport and exercise science at the University of Portsmouth in the U.K., studies breast movement and tests breast support products in the lab.
To do so, she and her colleagues have women running on a treadmill bare breasted (bless those ladies), and then in low or high support bras. They use 3-D motion capture to look at the range of movement of the breasts.
âWe have some very willing participantsâand we owe them a lot,â Norris says.
In the lab, Norris and her colleagues have found that breasts move in a figure eight pattern. Not just up and downâthat vertical movement is what most runners think ofâbut side to side and forward and backward as well. â[Breast is] just a mass of tissue, not a muscle,â Norris says. âIt is not rigid structure. It can move in all three dimensions when we run.â And it does.
When you add all that movement in three planes together, Norris says, breastsâunsupportedâmove about 15 centimeters during running. (Different labs report different numbers, depending on the cup size of the cohort theyâre testing.) About 50 percent of the movement is in the vertical, and then 25 percent is side to side movement, and the other 25 percent is anterior-posterior motion.
Regardless, thatâs about six inches of motion with every stride.
With all that movement, female runners need support.
Shop carefully, the experts urge. Try on a lot of different bras. Get the best fit possible. Look for a specialty running store with a knowledgeable female salesperson. Buy a high support bra for running.
Some women prefer compression, others prefer encapsulation models. Doesnât matter. The best bra is the one that youâre happy to wear.
âWeâre all about bra fit here,â Norris says. âIt is one of the most important facets for any woman in sport. We always say that it should be one that fits you extremely well and one youâre comfortable with.â
If you get one that hooks in the back, you should be able to wear it on its loosest fastening. As it goes through the wash and becomes looser, you can go to the tighter fastenings.
Hereâs what surprised Norris, a runner herself, from the research in her lab: It doesnât matter what speed youâre going, your breasts move the same amount. âI would have thought that the faster I run, the more my breasts might move. Thatâs not actually the way it goes,â she says. âIf youâre running at 10 kilometers per hour (about 10:00 pace), theyâre actually moving at their maximal displacement. If youâre running at 14 kilometers per hour (about 7:00 pace), theyâre not going to move any more than that.â
The lesson for runners: Donât think if youâre going for a long, slow run, you can use a bra that is less supportive. You need a high support bra all the time.
Athletes new to a running program often notice a curious reduction in breast size. Whatâs happening?
Running in essence doesnât shrink your breasts, Norris says. But the breasts are composed of fat and fibrous tissues. âSo if a person is training and eating well and theyâre reducing their overall body fat, itâs reasonable to think they could also decrease their breast size because theyâre decreasing fat in their breasts,â she says. âIt works more like decreasing their overall body fat instead of spot reduction.â
There are different kinds of breast painâmost of which are easily explained. But you shouldnât ignore it. âBreast pain is pain,â Cheville says.
A lot of breast pain during exercise is from inadequate supportâyour bra falling down on the job. (See No. 4.) And, Cheville says, for large-breasted women, adequate support can be tough to find.
Many women are extra sensitive in their breasts in the days leading up to menstruation. Itâs highly variable from person to person. If the pain is severe enough, you might want to pick a workout with less impact. âRecognize that this too will pass, and while youâre tender, take it easy,â Cheville says.
If you want to power through, itâs fine to use an over-the-counter anti-inflammatory. And watch the salt intake, which can lead you to retain water during the perimenstrual time, adding to the swelling in your breasts, she says.
Any unusual pain, see a doctor. âA small breasted woman who has new onset pain, thatâs harder to explain and more concerning,â Cheville says. âShe should probably see a clinician.â
Recent research out of the Portsmouth lab has shown that breast comfort affects a womanâs willingness to run. It can be hard enough to get motivated to drag yourself out the door for a few miles. Without being conscious of it, you could be letting your breasts sabotage your workout plans. Says Norris: âIf you pick up the wrong bra, youâre not going to go.â
Recent studies have established a clear link between exercise and reduced rates of breast cancer, Cheville says.
âPrimary prevention means it keeps you from getting it in the first place,â she says. âSecondary prevention means it keeps it from coming back. For breast cancer, thereâs pretty solid evidence for both primary and secondary prevention with exercise.â
A 2014Â study showed running beats walking for breast cancer survival rates. Vigorous exercise was better than moderate exercise for the women in the study.
All the more reason to hit the roadâwith a good bra, of course.
The article 8 Things to Know About Running and Your Breasts originally appeared on Runnerâs World.