The flu and early pregnancy
Cold and flu during pregnancy and breastfeeding
Cold and flu during pregnancy and breastfeeding | Pregnancy Birth and Baby beginning of content8-minute read
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Key facts
- A cold is an infection of the upper respiratory tract caused by a virus.
- Colds usually get better on their own (without any taking specific treatment), but there are things you can do to help yourself feel better while you recover.
- Influenza (‘the flu’) is a viral infection that can cause serious complications in pregnancy for both mum and baby.
- The influenza vaccine is the best way to protect you and your baby from catching the flu.
- Some medicines are not safe to use during pregnancy. If you are pregnant and not sure whether a medicine is safe to use, ask your doctor or pharmacist for advice.
Colds and flu symptoms can be very similar to the symptoms of COVID-19. Even if your symptoms are mild, get tested for COVID-19 immediately — use the colds and flu Symptom Checker if you're not sure what to do. You can also learn more here about COVID-19 during pregnancy.
How do I manage a cold when I’m pregnant or breastfeeding?
A cold is a viral infection of the upper respiratory tract. This means that a cold can affect your throat and airways and cause symptoms such as:
- sore throat
- headache
- sneezing
- blocked or runny nose
- cough
- mild fever
Colds can be very uncomfortable, but they are not dangerous to you or your baby.
Colds get better on their own without any specific treatment. Antibiotics will not help you recover from a cold any faster, because colds are caused by viruses and not bacteria.
There are things you can do to treat your symptoms and make you feel more comfortable while your body fights the virus:
- Resting gives your body more energy to fight the infection.
- Drink lots of fluids — this will help you feel better and is important for your milk supply when you are breastfeeding.
- Avoid dehydration which can be dangerous in pregnancy — warm drinks with lemon and honey can be especially soothing.
- Avoid exposure to cigarette smoke.
- Use saline (salt water) nasal sprays or rinses to clear mucus from your nose and sinuses.
- Inhale steam (using a bowl of hot water, or a warm shower) to help clear your nose and sinuses.
There are some medicines you need to avoid while you’re pregnant or breastfeeding. If you’re not sure whether a particular medicine is safe to use, ask your doctor or pharmacist.
You should continue to breastfeed your baby if you have a cold so that your baby gets antibodies from your breast milk, which may protect them from getting sick.
How do I manage the flu when I’m pregnant or breastfeeding?
Influenza, also known as the ‘flu’, is an infection caused by the influenza virus.
Most people who catch the flu start to notice symptoms about 1 to 3 days after being in contact with someone carrying the virus.
Symptoms of the flu include:
- fever
- sore throat
- cough
- severe tiredness
- muscle aches
- loss of appetite
If you are pregnant and think you might have the flu, you should see your doctor right away. If you are pregnant, especially if you are in your second or third trimester, you are more likely to become seriously unwell with the flu than people who are not pregnant.
If your doctor suspects that you have the flu, they may take a swab from the inside of your nose and throat to confirm the diagnosis. They may also prescribe you an antiviral medicine if they are concerned about the effects of the flu on your health. This medicine is more effective the earlier you take it, so it’s important to see your doctor when you first notice flu symptoms.
There are also strategies you can use to relieve your symptoms while you recover. These strategies are similar to those used to treat cold symptoms.
Is the flu dangerous during pregnancy?
If you are pregnant, the flu can be dangerous for you and for your baby.
If you are pregnant, you are more likely to catch the flu, and you are more likely to experience severe symptoms and complications. Even if you are healthy and your pregnancy is normal, catching the flu can cause life-threatening complications.
Complications of the flu in pregnancy include:
- pneumonia
- damage to your heart or other organs
- premature labour
- stillbirth
Can I get the flu vaccine during pregnancy or while breastfeeding?
Yes. The flu vaccine is the best way to protect both you and your baby from catching the flu. The flu vaccination is recommended at any stage of pregnancy, anyone planning a pregnancy, or anyone who is breastfeeding.
It is safe to have the flu vaccine in pregnancy and while breastfeeding. It is free at any trimester during pregnancy through the National Immunisation Program.
You should get vaccinated against the flu even if you were already vaccinated last year. This is because the flu vaccine is updated every year to give you the most protection from the type of influenza that is expected to be common that year.
What medicines can I take during pregnancy?
During pregnancy, you may have conditions that need treatment with medicines. Some medicines are not safe to use during pregnancy. If you are pregnant, it’s important to speak to your doctor or pharmacist before starting, stopping or changing any prescription or over-the-counter medicines.
Here are some common medicines and information about their use, during pregnancy.
- Paracetamol is considered safe at all stages of pregnancy.
- Ibuprofen and other non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) should not be used during pregnancy unless your doctor has prescribed them.
- Some cough medicines are safe during pregnancy, but not all types. If you are pregnant and feel very unwell with cold symptoms, ask your doctor or pharmacist for advice.
- Saline nasal sprays are safe to use during pregnancy. Decongestant nasal sprays (used to relieve a blocked nose) are generally safe to use during pregnancy.
- Oral decongestant medicines, such as pseudoephedrine and phenylephrine are not recommended during pregnancy.
There is limited scientific information about many herbal or complementary products or medicines and their safety during pregnancy. If you are thinking about using herbal medicines during pregnancy, it’s a good idea to check with your doctor or pharmacist about their safety and effectiveness.
What medicines can I take while I’m breastfeeding?
If you need to take medicines while you are breastfeeding, check with your doctor or pharmacist that they are safe for you and your baby. Even when your medicine is considered safe during breastfeeding, it is best to breastfeed your baby before you take your medicine.
While you are breastfeeding, it’s especially important to maintain good hygiene to reduce the chance of spreading the infection to your baby and other members of your household.
Here are some common medicines and some information about their use while you’re breastfeeding.
- Ibuprofen is generally safe to use in breastfeeding. If you are taking other medicines or have other health conditions, speak with your doctor about using ibuprofen in your circumstance.
- Aspirin is not to be used for pain or fever if you are breastfeeding.
- Codeine may make your baby drowsy, especially in young or small babies, and if you have a family history of codeine sensitivity. Codeine is found in many cold and flu tablets. If your baby becomes more drowsy than usual after you have taken codeine, stop using it and speak to your doctor.
- Pseudoephedrine is a decongestant found in some cold and flu tablets. It doesn’t transfer easily into breastmilk, but it is associated with reducing milk supply and may cause your baby to be irritable. Pseudoephedrine is not generally recommended if you are breastfeeding.
- Phenylephrine is another decongestant sometimes used in cold and flu tablets. It has not been well studied, but it seems to transfer poorly into breast milk. It is used for children and babies.
- Saline nasal sprays are safe to use while you are breastfeeding.
- Decongestant nasal sprays (medicines that relieve a blocked nose) with the active ingredients oxymetazoline and xylometazoline can be used while you’re breastfeeding because they transfer poorly into breast milk, and work in the nose.
There is limited scientific information about many herbal or complementary products or medicines and their safety while breastfeeding. If you are breastfeeding and want to use a herbal medicine, check with your doctor or pharmacist about their safety and effectiveness before you do.
Speak to a maternal child health nurse
Call Pregnancy, Birth and Baby to speak to a maternal child health nurse on 1800 882 436 or video call. Available 7am to midnight (AET), 7 days a week.
Sources:
The Royal Women's Hospital (Herbal medicines in pregnancy and breastfeeding), The Royal Hospital for Women (Medicines in pregnancy), Department of Health (Protecting your baby against influenza starts when you’re pregnant), The Royal Hospital for Women (Pregnancy and flu), NSW Health (Common cold in pregnancy and breastfeeding), Department of Health (Influenza (flu) vaccine), Department of Health (National Immunisation Program Schedule)Learn more here about the development and quality assurance of healthdirect content.
Last reviewed: June 2022
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Influenza (flu) and pregnancy | March of Dimes
It’s safe to get the flu shot. It protects you and your baby from serious health problems during and after pregnancy.
Pregnant women who get the flu are more likely than women who don’t get it to have problems, like preterm labor and premature birth.
If you think you have the flu, call your health care provider right away.
Quick treatment can help prevent serious flu complications.What is the flu?
Influenza (also called flu) is a virus that can cause serious illness. It’s more than just a runny nose and sore throat. The flu can make you very sick, and it can be especially harmful if you get it during or right after pregnancy.
How does the flu spread?
The flu spreads easily from person to person. When someone with the flu coughs, sneezes or speaks, the virus spreads through the air. You can get infected with the flu if you breathe it in or if you touch something (like a door handle or a phone) that has the flu virus on it and then touch your nose, eyes or mouth.
People with the flu may be able to infect others from 1 day before they get sick up to 5 to 7 days after. People who are very sick with the flu or young children may be able to spread the flu longer, especially if they still have symptoms.
How can the flu harm your pregnancy?
Health complications from the flu, like a lung infection called pneumonia, can be serious and even deadly, especially if you’re pregnant. If you get the flu during pregnancy, you’re more likely than other adults to have serious complications. It’s best to get a flu shot before you get pregnant. Getting a flu shot can help reduce your risk of getting the flu, having serious flu complications and needing treatment in a hospital.
Pregnant women who get the flu are more likely than women who don’t get it to have preterm labor (labor that happens before 37 weeks of pregnancy) and premature birth (birth that happens before 37 weeks of pregnancy. Fever from the flu may be linked to birth defects, like neural tube defects, and other problems in your baby. A birth defect is a health condition that is present at birth. Birth defects change the shape or function of one or more parts of the body. They can cause problems in overall health, how the body develops, or in how the body works. Neural tube defects are birth defects of the brain and spinal cord.
How does the flu shot help protect you from flu?
The flu shot contains a vaccine that helps prevent you from getting the flu. The flu shot can’t cause the flu. It’s safe to get a flu shot any time during pregnancy, but it’s best to get it before flu season (October through May). Even though you’re more likely to get the flu during flu season, you can get it any time of year.
There are many different flu viruses, and they’re always changing. Each year a new flu vaccine is made to protect against three or four flu viruses that are likely to make people sick during the upcoming flu season. Protection from a flu shot only lasts about a year, so it’s important to get a flu shot every year. You can get the shot from your health care provider, and many pharmacies and work places offer it each fall. Use the HealthMap Vaccine Finder to find out where you can get the flu vaccine.
Is it safe to get a flu shot during pregnancy?
It’s safe for most pregnant women to get the flu shot. Tell your health care provider if you have any severe allergies or if you’ve ever had a severe allergic reaction to a flu shot. Severe allergic reactions to flu shots are rare. If you’re worried about being allergic to the flu shot, talk to your provider to make sure it’s safe for you.
Some flu vaccines are made with eggs. Most women with egg allergies can get the flu shot. But if you have severe egg allergies, get the shot in a medical setting (like a doctor’s office, hospital or clinic) from a provider who knows how to treat severe allergies and allergic reactions.
Pregnant women should not get the flu nasal spray. This is a spray that’s put in your nose.
What are signs and symptoms of the flu?
Signs of a condition are things someone else can see or know about you, like you have a rash or you’re coughing. Symptoms are things you feel yourself that others can’t see, like having a sore throat or feeling dizzy. Common signs and symptoms of the flu include:
- Being very tired or sleepy (also called fatigue)
- Cough
- Fever (100 F or above), chills or body shakes. Not everyone who has the flu has a fever.
- Headache, or muscle or body aches
- Runny or stuffy nose
- Sore throat
- Vomiting (throwing up) or diarrhea (more common in children)
The flu often comes on quickly. Fever and most other symptoms can last a week or longer. But some people can be sick from the flu for a long time, including children, people older than 65, pregnant women and women who have recently had a baby.
Call 911 and get medical care right away if you have any of these signs or symptoms:
- Feeling your baby move less or not at all
- High fever that doesn’t go down after taking acetaminophen (Tylenol®). Don’t take any medicine without checking with your provider first.
- Pain or pressure in the chest or belly
- Sudden dizziness or confusion
- Trouble breathing or shortness of breath
- Vomiting that’s severe or doesn’t stop
- Flu signs or symptoms that get better but then come back with fever and a worse cough
How is the flu treated during pregnancy?
If you think you have the flu even if you’ve been vaccinated, call your health care provider right away. She may prescribe an antiviral medicine to help prevent or treat the flu. Antivirals kill infections caused by viruses. They can make your flu milder and help you feel better faster. Antivirals also can help prevent serious flu complications, like pneumonia. For flu, antivirals work best if you take them within 2 days of having symptoms. Quick treatment with antiviral medicine can help prevent serious flu complications.
If you’ve had close contact with someone who has the flu during your pregnancy or in the 2 weeks after giving birth, tell your health care provider. Even if you don’t have signs or symptoms of flu, your provider may want to treat you with an antiviral medicine to help prevent you from getting the flu and having serious complications.
Three medicines are approved in the United States to prevent or treat the flu in pregnant women and women who recently had a baby. Talk to your provider about which one is right for you:
- Oseltamivir (brand name Tamiflu®). This medicine comes as a capsule or liquid.
- Zanamivir (brand name Relenza®). This medicine is a powder that you breathe in by mouth. It isn’t recommended for people with breathing problems, like asthma.
- Peramivir (Rapivab®). This medicine is given through a needle into a vein (also called IV) by a health care provider.
If you have a fever, call your provider as soon as possible and ask about taking acetaminophen. If you have the flu, get lots of rest and drink plenty of fluids. You may not want to eat much. Try eating small meals to help your body get better.
How can you stop the flu from spreading?
When you have the flu, you can spread it to others. Here’s what you can do to help prevent it from spreading:
- Stay home when you’re sick and limit contact with others.
- Don’t kiss anyone.
- Cough or sneeze into a tissue or into your arm. Throw used tissues in the trash.
- Try not to touch your eyes, nose or mouth.
- Wash your hands with soap and water before touching anyone. You also can use alcohol-based hand sanitizers. Use enough hand sanitizer so that it takes at least 15 seconds for your hands to dry.
- Use hot, soapy water or a dishwasher to wash your dishes and utensils.
- Don’t share your dishes, glasses, utensils or toothbrush.
Why is the flu so harmful during pregnancy?
The flu can be dangerous during pregnancy because pregnancy affects your immune system, heart and lungs. Your immune system is your body’s way of protecting itself from illnesses and diseases. When your body senses something like a virus that can harm your health, your immune system works hard to fight the virus.
When you’re pregnant, your immune system isn’t as quick to respond to illnesses as it was before pregnancy. Your body knows that pregnancy is OK and that it shouldn’t reject your baby. So, your body naturally lowers the immune system’s ability to protect you and respond to illnesses so that it can welcome your growing baby. But a lowered immune system means you’re more likely get sick with viruses like the flu.
Another reason the flu can be harmful during pregnancy is that your lungs need more oxygen, especially in the second and third trimesters. Your growing belly puts pressure on your lungs, making them work harder in a smaller space. You may even find yourself feeling shortness of breath at times. Your heart is working hard, too. It’s busy supplying blood to you and your baby. All of this means your body is stressed during pregnancy. This stress on your body can make you more likely to get the flu. If you’re pregnant or had a baby within the last 2 weeks, you’re more likely than other women to have serious health problems from the flu.
More information
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Pregnant women & Influenza
Flu.gov
See also: Flu and your baby, Vaccinations and pregnancy
Last reviewed: September, 2019
Colds during pregnancy: how to treat?
Any cold or respiratory disease in early pregnancy, during the primary formation of the fetus, can lead to unpredictable consequences and complications. The matter is complicated by the fact that most medications are absolutely contraindicated for use during gestation.
In this regard, the treatment and prevention of colds in pregnant women is an important issue, which should be approached especially responsibly! The main thesis is: be careful with medicines and apply mild preventive measures based on alternative medicine methods to avoid respiratory diseases and flu.
"One for two - immunity"
This is a very fragile system, it is not necessary to interfere in its work, but it is necessary to support and strengthen it. Pregnancy belongs to the category of special, albeit temporary, conditions during which a woman needs additional protection.
This issue will help simple recommendations that are available to everyone:
• During the period of frequent weather changes, it is necessary to dress warmer, paying special attention to footwear.
• During an epidemic, it is better for a pregnant woman to refrain from being in crowded places - transport, metro, shops and hospitals. If there is an urgent need, to prevent possible infection, a protective respiratory mask should be worn before leaving the house.
• Be especially careful about hygiene after visiting the street and public places. Upon returning home, the first thing to do is wash your hands thoroughly.
Interesting: More than 90% of all acute respiratory infections are caused by viruses, about 10% are bacteria and other pathogens. Accordingly, any soap can be used, not necessarily antibacterial.
• Before going outside, you can lubricate the nasal mucosa with oxolinic ointment. Upon returning home, flush the upper respiratory tract with soda solution.
• Rationalization of nutrition and intake of vitamins will strengthen the immune defense. It is especially useful to eat fruits and vegetables that are enriched with vitamins and have not undergone heat treatment.
Interesting: our grandmothers used to say: in order not to get sick, you need to drink chicken broth! Strange, but until recently, scientists did not attach much importance to this prophylactic. Pulmonologist Stefan Rennard decided to find out if this was true or not. The professor conducted a study and proved that the use of chicken broth affects the mobility of neutrophils, white blood cells that protect the body from infections and activate the immune system.
- Vitamins can be taken using ready-made pharmaceutical multivitamin complexes. Before choosing a drug, you should consult your doctor.
- Compliance with the regimen and duration of sleep - at least 9 hours a day. The possibility of psychotraumatic situations should be minimized.
- Maintaining cleanliness in the living quarters (ventilation, wet cleaning).
- Air humidification is an important aspect in the prevention of influenza and respiratory diseases. If air conditioners or heaters are used in the house of a pregnant woman, it would be best to purchase a mechanical humidifier.
Medications for prevention
- Grippferon - a drug in the form of drops for the nose, which provides prevention and treatment of influenza, is not contraindicated for pregnant and lactating women. The medicine stimulates an increase in immunity, has a pronounced antiviral effect that can protect against colds, infections and influenza varieties.
- Ascorbic acid - can be used as a separate source of vitamin C in a synthetic version, with a reduced daily intake from food. Ascorbic acid not only prevents infection, but also fights viruses that have already entered the body of a woman.
- Viferon - nasal ointment, which is prescribed for the prevention of influenza and respiratory infections during an epidemic. The ointment has protective and immunomodulatory effects, and also allows you to deal with disorders that are already occurring in the body at the time of use. Viferon in the form of a nasal ointment has no contraindications for use in pregnant women at any time, including the first trimester.
- Aquamaris is a natural drug in the form of a nasal spray that allows you to moisturize the nasal mucosa, thereby reducing the risk of influenza viruses entering the nasal cavity.
I would like to say a few words about such a method of prevention as vaccination. Most often, the expectant mother may be at risk of infection due to the annual influenza epidemic. This disease is dangerous for a pregnant woman precisely because of its complications: pneumonia, bronchitis, otitis media. Influenza in a pregnant woman can also affect the health of the fetus. Most of all, it is dangerous in the early stages of pregnancy, when the tissues and organs of the human embryo are laid and formed. Viral intoxication or drug exposure can lead to pathology of the child's organs. In later pregnancy, there is a risk of infection of the fetus.
The most dangerous consequence of influenza in a pregnant woman is threatened miscarriage or premature birth!
It is quite natural that expectant mothers often wonder whether or not to vaccinate.
Studies have concluded that the use of inactivated ("killed") influenza vaccines does not have a teratogenic effect on the fetus and does not harm the health of a pregnant woman. After consulting with your doctor about such an inoculation, you can come to an optimal solution. If an influenza epidemic is inevitable, and the pregnant woman has no contraindications, then the vaccine should be given. If a pregnant woman has a negligible risk of infection, she does not come into contact with a large number of people, or is opposed to vaccination, then you can not do it. According to research, it is known that vaccination of mothers reduces the risk of influenza infection of a born child by 63%. Seasonal influenza prevention is carried out in September, October. Vaccinations for pregnant women are recommended from the second trimester of pregnancy.
In the period of a planned pregnancy, a flu shot is given 1 month before it: the formation of immunity occurs 2-4 weeks. Protection after vaccination lasts about a year.
If infection does occur, action should be taken immediately if at least one symptom of the disease is detected. The health of a pregnant woman and her unborn child depends entirely on her responsibility and respect for her own body.
Proven folk remedies will be used first. Since pregnant women cannot steam their legs, steam their hands, and this will facilitate nasal breathing. Bundle up, put on woolen socks and crawl under the covers: warmth, peace and sleep are good for colds. Do not forget to drink plenty of water - hot green tea with lemon and honey, lime blossom tea, cranberry juice, rosehip broth, dried fruit compote. Ginger in the form of tea also helps, not only with catarrhal symptoms, but with nausea in the morning.
Various hot milk drinks are also suitable. Honey can be added to milk, and it is best to boil it on onions. It must be emphasized right away that not all herbs for colds during pregnancy can be used. Here is a list of medicinal plants that are contraindicated: aloe, anise, barberry, elecampane (grass and root), sweet clover, oregano, St. John's wort, strawberries (leaves), viburnum (berries), raspberries (leaves), lemon balm, lovage, wormwood, licorice ( root), celandine, sage. Accordingly, preparations containing these plants should not be taken.
The use of medicines for colds during pregnancy must be treated with great care!
It is contraindicated to use the following drugs : Pertussin, Tussin plus, Joset, Glycodin, Ascoril, Travisil, Broncholitin, ACC, Grippeks, Codelac, Terpinkod. Do not use lozenges and lozenges for sore throat or cough are also undesirable due to the likelihood of allergic reactions.
Spray Pinosol, judging by the components indicated in the instructions, is not dangerous during pregnancy. However, the essential oils contained in the preparation - pine, peppermint, eucalyptus, thymol, guaiazulene (wormwood oil) - can lead to an allergic reaction with swelling of the nasal mucosa.
Viferon suppositories are allowed to be used only after 14 weeks from the start of conception. This drug contains recombinant human interferon alpha-2, ascorbic acid and alpha-tocopherol acetate and has antiviral, immunomodulatory and antiproliferative effects. It is used in the treatment of various infectious and inflammatory diseases in adults and children (including newborns). In the form of an ointment, Viferon is used to treat herpetic lesions of the skin and mucous membranes. The ointment is applied in a thin layer to the affected areas of the skin 3-4 times a day for 5-7 days.
The homeopathic preparation Stodal, which includes predominantly herbal ingredients, acts on various types of cough and has an expectorant and bronchodilator effect.
Viburkol - homeopathic suppositories - have analgesic, anti-inflammatory, sedative, antispasmodic action. They are prescribed in the complex therapy of acute respiratory viral infections and other uncomplicated infections (including in newborns), as well as in inflammatory processes of the upper respiratory tract and inflammatory diseases of the genitourinary system.
So, you can try to eliminate a slight ailment on your own, but there are conditions under which you need to call a doctor at home:
- Prolonged fever;
- Myalgia, fatigue, fatigue, general malaise;
- Difficulty breathing, nasopharyngeal lumps and dry or wet barking cough;
- A pregnant woman is troubled by severe pressing headache.
In conclusion, I would like to emphasize the importance of treating chronic diseases before pregnancy, a healthy lifestyle during childbearing and following all doctor's orders.
I wish expectant mothers and their loved ones to try to maintain a good mood: optimists live longer and happier, they are more productive. Remember your victories and pleasant moments more often and everything will be fine!
Influenza in early pregnancy: complications, treatment, prevention | Healthy life | Health
Influenza is a disease that scares many people. It is fraught with serious complications. Yes, and the flow is not pleasant. At the same time, experts identify some categories of people for whom such an infection is especially dangerous. For example, pregnant women. Many people worry about the flu in early pregnancy.
Influenza during pregnancy
Influenza is a highly contagious viral disease that is most often seasonal: it occurs in the autumn-winter and early spring periods. The infection, as doctors say, is transmitted by airborne droplets, airborne dust. In rare cases, transmission is also noted in the household way. The virus can persist on different surfaces for a long time: on plastic and glass - up to 3 days, on paper - up to 12 hours.
Influenza in early pregnancy does not differ in its symptoms from the standard manifestations. “The incubation period for influenza is quite short: from a few hours to 7 days. On average it takes 2-3 days. It has quite vivid manifestations: a sharp increase in temperature, a feeling of body aches, a feeling of discomfort, a burning sensation in the nasopharynx, in the nose, a sore throat may appear, weakness is also felt, nausea and vomiting may be noted, as well as diarrhea, ”says obstetrician-gynecologist Angelina Brainina .
Influenza during early pregnancy: nuances and risks
Influenza during early pregnancy, as well as at other times, is extremely dangerous. “Initially, nature came up with the idea that the expectant mother has a natural immunodeficiency, that is, reduced immunity. This is necessary so that the natural immunity of the mother does not suppress the development of the unborn child. Because of this, we observe more vivid symptoms in pregnant women and more frequent complications when infected with the flu, ”says Angelina Brainina. And this is not the only difficulty.
“A feature of the disease is also the fact that the mother's body needs an increased amount of oxygen, and the fetus becomes more sensitive to hypoxia. Therefore, in pregnant women, a formidable complication is respiratory failure, which adversely affects the fetus, ”the obstetrician-gynecologist notes.
The risks of complications in expectant mothers are also rising. “Pregnant women are more likely to develop secondary infections against the background of a drop in immunity, pneumonia may occur. In almost half of the cases of hospitalizations of pregnant women with influenza, they develop pneumonia, ”the doctor explains.
Women also develop an inflammatory response, whether it is flu in the first trimester or later, called systemic inflammatory response syndrome (cytokine storm). She, as Angelina Brainina says, can cause the death of both the mother and the fetus.
Flu during early pregnancy (I trimester) raises questions for many. Despite the fact that doctors note that, according to the latest research, influenza infection of a pregnant woman in the third trimester is more dangerous than in the first two, there are still many problems with the virus in the early stages. “The first trimester is up to 12 weeks. There is a complicated story with a viral infection of the fetus and the effect on various organs. Influenza in the first trimester is dangerous because the formation of all major organs and systems takes place just before 12 weeks. The main target of the virus is the nervous system of the fetus, its cardiovascular system. As a result, cleft lip, cleft palate, development of neural tube defects and congenital heart defects are observed in the children of women who have met with a combination of early pregnancy and influenza. There is also a certain relationship between infection in pregnant women and the development of schizophrenia, leukemia, autism, Parkinson's disease, and various metabolic disorders, in particular diabetes mellitus, in a child in the future, ”notes Angelina Brainina.
In addition, the specialist adds, the flu in early pregnancy is fraught with the fact that the pregnancy may end in a miscarriage or freeze. In the later stages, infection is fraught with fetal growth retardation and intrauterine death of the child.
Influenza in early pregnancy: treatment and prevention
The first trimester of pregnancy and influenza require careful medical supervision. Today, the diagnosis of pathology, as noted by Angelina Brainina, does not constitute any particular problem. Now there are many accurate and fast diagnostic methods.
As far as treatment is concerned, there may be certain difficulties. “Some drugs have a toxic effect on the fetus, while others have not been studied in pregnant women. Therefore, it is extremely important to comply with dosages, and the treatment of this disease should be prescribed according to vital indications, most often in a hospital or under the strict supervision of a physician. In no case should you be treated on your own, you should not prescribe antiviral drugs on your own, ”says the obstetrician-gynecologist.