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Most women of childbearing age are healthy and most pregnancies are
considered "low-risk." For most women, the surest way to have a healthy
baby is to live a healthy lifestyle.
Suggested precautions for a healthy pregnancy:
- Get early prenatal care, even before you're pregnant.
- Eat a well-balanced diet, including a vitamin supplement that contains
folic acid.
- Exercise regularly with your doctor's permission.
- Avoid alcohol, cigarettes, and illicit drugs, and limit caffeine.
- Avoid x-rays, hot tubs, and saunas.
- Avoid infections.
Get Good Healthcare
When it comes to medical care and pregnancy, you can never start too
early.
"The best start to having a healthy baby is to see your health-care
provider before you conceive," says Richard Schwarz, M.D., an obstetrician
and national consultant for the March of Dimes.
"There are lots of things you can do ahead of time," Schwarz adds.
"You can make sure you're immune to rubella [German measles], you can
know your blood type, you can stop smoking and make sure your diet is
healthy, and you can get any illnesses you might have under control.
Once you're pregnant, your health professional--either an obstetrician,
family practitioner, nurse-practitioner, or nurse-midwife--will have
you begin with monthly visits that increase to once a week or more
at the end.
At each visit, the physician or nurse will perform a series of examinations
and tests to determine the health of the mother and baby. These include
measuring the growth of the uterus, listening to the baby's heartbeat,
taking the mother's blood pressure and weight, and checking her urine
for evidence of protein or sugar, which could be symptoms of complications.
The care provider will ask the mother if she has any concerns or problems
such as blurred vision, leg cramps, abdominal cramps, or unusual headaches.
The mother may also undergo ultrasound and genetic tests during the
pregnancy.
Although prenatal visits may seem simple and even mundane, their
importance can't be overestimated. Years of research have shown that
pregnant women who get adequate prenatal care are more likely to have
healthy babies and fewer complications during labor and recovery.
Says Schwarz, "We know that pregnancy outcomes are better in women
with early prenatal care."
Eat for Two
Good nutrition is another crucial step in having a healthy baby.
A pregnancy takes about 300 extra calories a day to maintain, and
an average-sized woman can expect to gain between 25 and 35 pounds
overall.
Those extra calories should be nutritious ones, however. A pregnant
woman needs a balanced diet complete with protein, fruits, vegetables,
and whole grains, and a minimum of sweets and fats.
"Good nutrition is extremely important even before a pregnancy,"
says Shirley Blakely, Ph.D., a registered dietitian with the Food
and Drug Administration's Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition.
"If nature favors the growing fetus, the mother will suffer if she
hasn't had a good diet."
According to the March of Dimes, a pregnant woman should increase
her daily food portions to include:
- 6 to 11 servings of breads and other whole grains
- 3 to 5 servings of vegetables
- 2 to 4 servings of fruits
- 4 to 6 servings of milk and milk products
- 3 to 4 servings of meat and protein foods
- 6 to 8 glasses of water, and no more than one soft drink or cup
of coffee per day to limit caffeine.
Some nutrients have been found to provide specific benefit to mother
or child. For example, the B vitamins have been found to be especially
important. One of them, folate, or its synthetic form, folic acid,
can reduce the risk of birth defects of the brain and spinal cord,
called the "neural tube." (See "Folic Acid
")
Each year, an estimated 2,500 babies are born with neural tube defects.
The most common of these is spina bifida, in which the spine is not
closed. The exposed nerves are damaged, leaving the child with varying
degrees of paralysis, incontinence, and sometimes mental retardation.
Because neural tube defects develop in the first 28 days after conception,
"Once you know you're pregnant it's too late to do anything about
[them]," says Blakely.
Because half of all pregnancies are unplanned, the U.S. Public Health
Service recommends that all women of childbearing age get 400 micrograms
of folic acid each day. If all women received that amount daily, the
incidence of neural tube defects might be reduced by an estimated
45 percent, studies suggest. To help reach this goal, FDA now requires
that all flour products, such as breads, buns and bagels, be fortified
with extra folic acid.
Natural sources of folic acid include green leafy vegetables, nuts,
beans, and citrus fruits. It's also in many fortified breakfast cereals
and some vitamin supplements.
Calcium and iron are also especially important during pregnancy.
Getting enough calcium will help prevent a new mother from losing
her own bone density as the fetus uses the mineral for bone growth.
Iron helps both the mother and baby's blood carry oxygen. Most women
need supplements to maintain adequate levels of these minerals. A
daily vitamin supplement, while not an adequate substitute for a healthy
diet, helps fill in the gaps on days when a woman's diet is less than
perfect.
Prevent Infections
Many infections during pregnancy can be dangerous to an unborn child.
Urinary tract infections and any sexually transmitted diseases need
to be treated immediately.
Cat litter and raw meat may contain the parasite Toxoplasma gondii,
which can cause toxoplasmosis infection. It's rare for a pregnant
woman to get the infection, but if she does, her baby could be at
risk for serious illness or death. Get someone else to change the
kitty litter if possible, or wear a face mask and rubber gloves for
protection.
Problems also may arise when a pregnant woman eats undercooked or
raw foods, or cooked foods that have been cross-contaminated with
bacteria from raw food nearby. Food poisoning can cause meningitis,
pneumonia, or even death to an unborn child, plus the vomiting and
diarrhea involved leave the mother exhausted and dehydrated. (See
"On the Home Front" in the November-December 1997 FDA Consumer.)
Avoid Drugs - Including the Legal Ones
Nearly everyone knows pregnant women shouldn't take illicit drugs,
but it's the legal ones--alcohol and tobacco--that are more commonly
the source of pregnancy problems.
"I think if women truly understood the adverse impact smoking and
drinking have on their babies, they would quit," says Jeffrey King,
M.D., the director of the division of maternal and fetal medicine
at Wright State University School of Medicine, and the author of a
recent study on substance abuse in pregnancy.
Smokers put their babies at a significantly higher risk of preterm
birth, low birth weight, and stillbirth compared with nonsmokers.
After birth, the babies of mothers who smoked during pregnancy are
more likely to have poor lung development, asthma and respiratory
infections, and to die of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS).
If a woman quits smoking early in pregnancy, however, she can still
improve her chances of having a healthy baby. Expectant fathers or
other members of the family should quit, too, because studies suggest
breathing second-hand smoke may be dangerous as well.
Alcohol, too, can damage a developing fetus. Alcohol travels rapidly
to the bloodstream, so when an expectant mother drinks, her baby drinks
also.
Alcohol is known to cause mental retardation and facial abnormalities
in babies, a condition called fetal alcohol syndrome. The Institute
of Medicine estimates some 12,000 children with fetal alcohol syndrome
are born in the United States each year. No one knows what amount
of alcohol is safe during pregnancy; therefore, the U.S. Surgeon General
recommends pregnant women avoid alcohol altogether.
A few other activities are known to be dangerous during pregnancy.
X-rays can expose the fetus to radiation and potentially cause birth
defects. Hot tubs and saunas can raise the core temperature of a pregnant
woman's body and could potentially harm the fetus. Warm baths, however,
are fine if the water is kept at body temperature.
Prescription Medications
Many drugs are appropriate for use in pregnancy, if really needed.
But a pregnant woman shouldn't take any medication, even an over-the-counter
one, unless she checks with her doctor first. If possible, she should
avoid taking drugs in the first trimester or taking more than one
medication at a time. She can also ask for the lowest dose possible
to treat her condition.
Some medications have a long history of being used in pregnancy without
problems. A pregnant woman shouldn't be deprived of drug therapy she
really needs, says Sandra Kweder, M.D., the co-chair of FDA's task
force on pregnancy labeling. She adds that women with pre-existing
medical conditions such as epilepsy, lupus, asthma, or high blood
pressure shouldn't quit their drugs because of pregnancy. Safer drugs
can be used if necessary, but those medical conditions still need
to be treated.
Kweder explains, "A common thing with patients is that they'll say,
'I know I'm supposed to take medication, but I'm worried about my
baby, so I'll take less of it instead.' They'll take it every other
day, or half as much. That's not wise."
The risks of a drug have to be weighed against its benefits. For
example, some epilepsy drugs are known to cause birth defects, but
an epileptic seizure can cause brain damage to the fetus. Most experts
agree that the benefits of medication in such cases outweigh the risks.
Other drugs, however, are not so clear-cut. "It's really hard because
there aren't easy answers," says Kweder. "For a baby to be healthy,
it needs a mother who's healthy." However, most drugs have not been
tested scientifically in pregnant women. Reliable scientific information
about medication use in pregnancy is often incomplete or nonexistent.
FDA is trying to change that.
The agency has begun a comprehensive review about how it regulates
drugs for pregnant women and how safety information is communicated
on the label. The present system is not as helpful as the agency would
like. "The system has been criticized, and rightly so," says Kweder.
"It is complicated to interpret data for medications used in pregnancy.
We're making progress, but it's slow."
A new system is needed, she says, but it will be difficult to create.
Drugs can't be tested in pregnant women the same as in other groups
of people. Animal studies, while helpful, don't necessarily show what
a drug will do to a woman and developing fetus.
In the meantime, a woman who has taken a drug and discovers she is
pregnant should consult her doctor and avoid making decisions about
her pregnancy in panic. While about 80 percent of approved drugs lack
adequate scientific evidence about use in pregnancy, that doesn't
necessarily mean they can harm the fetus or are harmful in the doses
prescribed.
Only a very few drugs definitely known to be extremely bad for a
human fetus are clearly labeled or, in one case, have special requirements
attached to their approval. The drug thalidomide, which was recently
approved by FDA to treat leprosy and is being explored for other uses,
is devastating to developing fetuses and causes severe deformities
of the arms and legs. FDA is requiring that patients who take the
drug enroll in a national registry that will track their progress
monthly and record the occurrence of any pregnancy. The hope is that
this process will discourage physicians from prescribing the drug
to women who might become pregnant and keep patients from "sharing"
the drug with a woman of childbearing age.
For Consumer Drug Information Click Here >> Prescription
Drug Information
Regular Exercise
There's increasing medical evidence to show that exercise, even a
vigorous workout, is healthy during pregnancy. An October 1998 study
published in the American Journal of Public Health found that exercise
is usually safe during pregnancy, and that women who exercised vigorously
were more likely to carry their babies to full term compared with
women who exercised less or not at all.
A pregnant woman should check with her doctor before exercising,
however. If she gets the OK to work out, she should do so at least
three times a week for 20 minutes each time, recommends the American
College of Obstetrics and Gynecology.
Walking, swimming, riding a stationary bicycle, and joining a prenatal
aerobics class are all excellent exercise choices for a pregnant woman.
Exercises that require jerky, bouncy movements and being outside in
hot weather are not good choices. Don't try deep knee bends, sit-ups
(or any exercise that requires you to lie on your back after the first
trimester), and toe touches. Other sports to avoid include downhill
skiing, rock climbing, and horseback riding.
Wear a supportive bra and properly fitting athletic shoes while exercising.
Stop if you feel dizzy, faint, overheated, or in pain. Drink plenty
of water.
Staying in shape will help you keep up your stamina during your own
impending marathon--labor! And, afterward, the more muscle mass you
have, the quicker you'll regain your pre-pregnancy shape and be able
to pack away those maternity pants.
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