If a Woman has Hepatitis C Can She Have a Baby?
If a woman has Hepatitis C virus, also know as HCV, this will not prevent her for becoming pregnant. But there
are issues to consider if a woman knows she has hepatitis and wants to have a child.
A pregnancy will not adversely affect the health of a woman with HCV but it may put any more strain on the
woman’s liver. So it is very important to regularly check liver function, by the use of a simple blood test,
throughout the pregnancy.
If the levels of infection in the bloodstream are very low then it is likely safe for her to get pregnant and
not worry about transmission to the baby. But, if her levels are high, if she is already showing signs of liver
damage, then there definitely is the possibility that she will transfer the infection to her child. If a woman has
high levels then there is a five to eight percent possibility of transmitting the Hepatitis C virus. Its much
higher if the mother is also suffering from AIDS.
Doctors are not certain at what point the infection is given to the baby. They don’t know if it’s while in the
womb or during the delivery. But they are reasonably certain it is not during conception. But breastfeeding is
something that needs to be thought of carefully if a woman has the Hepatitis C virus.
First, it should only be considered if the woman shows no signs of the infection. Second she should not
breastfeed if she notices that her nipples have become cracked or are bleeding. This could pass the infection on to
her baby especially if the baby has a cut anywhere in their mouth.
It is difficult to determine directly after the birth if the baby is infected. In fact it can take several
months before an answer is available. This is because the baby will have antibodies from the mother which make it
appear that they are infected until they are between fifteen and eighteen months old when they disappear on their
own.
At this point testing can be done. Doctors and researchers are still trying to determine if a child is infected
as a baby what the long-term results might be. Often even if infected the child will remain healthy in appearance
and attitude for many years.
For certain treatments the doctors will set specific terms that must be agreed upon. For example, if a woman is
about to begin a treatment period she must agree that both she and her partner will both use contraceptives during
the entire treatment and for the six months afterwards in view of the fact that the medications are known to cause
birth defects. The two drugs commonly used are interferon and ribavirin; it is the latter that can cause the
defects.
Woman should know that having Hepatitis C does not stop them from being mothers and doing the things that are so
much a part of motherhood like kissing and cuddling their children.
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