What is substance abuse during pregnancy?
Drugs, alcohol, and tobacco can harm your body and mind. If you
are pregnant, these substances can also hurt your baby. They enter
the baby's blood through the placenta. They can cause mental
problems, birth defects, and problems before, during, and after
birth.
What about street drugs?
Any street drug, especially one that can cause addiction, is
dangerous. You are addicted if you cannot carry out your usual
daily activities without it. If you are addicted to heroin or
cocaine, your baby can become addicted. The baby will then have
withdrawal symptoms after birth. You may neglect your own
healthcare, increasing your unborn baby's risk.
Even if you just use drugs sometimes, you are at risk because the
effects of drugs can be so harmful. Street drugs can cause you to
have flashbacks, convulsions, heart attacks, seizures, violent
behavior, and lung failure causing death. Use of street drugs can
increase the risk of losing the baby, delivering the baby too
soon, and having a small baby. Some babies may die while inside
the uterus, and others may die after delivery. The babies who
survive may have lifelong physical, behavioral, and emotional
problems. They may have brain, liver, kidney, or bone marrow
damage. They may be unusually fussy and may have uncontrollable
body movements. Drugs can also cause premature separation of the
placenta, which can cause sudden massive bleeding (hemorrhage).
This bleeding can put the lives of you and your baby in danger.
If you are hooked on street drugs (angel dust, hashish, speed,
LSD, peyote, cocaine, or marijuana), get help for your drug use
before you become pregnant. If you are already pregnant, get help
now. Ask your healthcare provider for advice and a possible
referral to a treatment program.
What about prescription drugs?
Make sure you discuss the use of prescription drugs with your
healthcare provider at your first prenatal visit. Some
prescription drugs can harm an unborn baby. Be sure to tell anyone
who prescribes medicine for you that you are pregnant.
If you have an infection that may need an antibiotic, check with
your healthcare provider. Some antibiotics are harmless. Others
could hurt your baby. For example, tetracycline should be avoided
during pregnancy. It may cause your child's teeth to be discolored
and may affect growth of the child's bones. Avoid sulfa drugs near
the end of your pregnancy. They may cause the baby's skin to
become yellowed (jaundiced) in the first days of life.
What about nonprescription medicines?
Check with your healthcare provider before you use any medicine or
natural remedy. Some nonprescription medicines and herbs are safe.
Others can cause problems during pregnancy.
If you have a fever, you can safely take acetaminophen (Tylenol)
in the doses recommended on the package. Do not take it for more
than 3 days without consulting your healthcare provider. Do not
take aspirin.
For heartburn, ask your healthcare provider what antacids you are
allowed to take. Most antacids are safe. Don't take too much of
these drugs. Antacids that contain magnesium can cause diarrhea
and aluminum-containing antacids can cause constipation.
To relieve hemorrhoids, you can use Preparation H if approved by
your healthcare provider.
Ask your healthcare provider before you take sleeping pills, or
any drug for a headache, cold, cough, or diarrhea. He or she can
tell you what is most likely to be safe and effective for you and
your baby.
What about alcohol?
While you are pregnant, drinking any amount of alcohol is not a
safe choice for your baby. Everything you eat and drink goes to
the baby. Because of the baby's small size, an alcoholic drink
that makes you feel relaxed is dangerous to your baby.
Pregnant women who drink alcohol risk having a child with birth
defects. Fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS) is the term used for certain
problems that a child may have if the mother drinks too much
alcohol when she is pregnant. FAS affects a child's growth and can
cause heart defects, malformed facial features, slowed growth,
mental retardation, and nervous system problems.
The more you drink during pregnancy, the greater the danger to
your baby. Frequent alcohol users (one or more drinks every week)
are much more likely to have children with FAS than women who
drink less frequently during pregnancy. However, because we do not
know what level of alcohol becomes dangerous, drinking no alcohol
at all during pregnancy is the only sure way to avoid any risk of
problems from alcohol.
The best time to stop drinking alcoholic beverages is before you
become pregnant. If you are pregnant and are still drinking, the
time to stop is now. If you usually drink alcohol at social
events, ask for soda, fruit juice, water, or alcohol-free beer or
wine. Mixed drinks can be made without alcohol. Do not celebrate
anything with alcohol. Do not hesitate to ask for support from
your family, friends, or healthcare provider to help stop drinking
during your pregnancy.
What about smoking?
Pregnant women who smoke, or who are exposed to secondhand smoke
are more likely to have small babies. These babies are more likely
to have problems during labor and delivery. They also have a
greater risk of developing health problems within a few months
after birth. Smoking increases the risk of miscarriage, premature
labor, stillbirth, sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), and
lifelong disabilities. In addition, there is a possible link
between smoking by a mother and attention deficit disorder
(hyperactivity) in children.
If you are a smoker, stop now. If you cannot quit completely, try
to cut down to fewer than 10 cigarettes a day. Cutting down or
stopping smoking during pregnancy reduces the risks. The risks are
about the same for women who stop early in pregnancy as for women
who are nonsmokers.
What about caffeine?
Coffee, tea, chocolate, some soft drinks, and some medicines
contain caffeine. Drinking caffeine during pregnancy is generally
safe. However, women who drink more than five or six cups of
coffee a day (600 milligrams of caffeine) are more likely to have
low-birth-weight babies and stillbirth. There are some reported
cases of increased miscarriages. To be on the safe side, limit the
caffeine you have each day to less than 200 milligrams (1 or 2
cups of coffee).
Developed by Phyllis G. Cooper, RN, MN, and RelayHealth.
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
© 2009 RelayHealth and/or its affiliates. All Rights Reserved.