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You are here : Home AIDS Factsheet Patient Populations Pregnancy and HIVPregnancy and HIV
HOW DO BABIES GET AIDS? Background Information -What is AIDS? -HIV Testing -Acute HIV Infection -How HIV Drugs Get Approved -HIV Life Cycle Laboratory Tests -Normal Laboratory Values -Complete Blood Count (CBC) -Chemistry Panel -Blood Sugar and Fats -CD4 (T-cell) Tests -Viral Load Tests -HIV Resistance Testing -Monitoring Drug Levels Preventing HIV Infection -Stopping the Spread of HIV -How Risky Is It? -Condoms -Drug Use and HIV -Harm Reduction and HIV -Treatment After Microbicides -Microbicides Living with HIV -Choosing an HIV Care Provider -Medical Appointments -Telling Others You are HIV Positive -Participating in a Clinical Trial -How to Spot HIV/AIDS Fraud -Vaccinations and HIV -Medications to Fight HIV -HIV Life Cycle -Taking Current Antiretroviral Drugs -What Is Antiretroviral Therapy (ART)? -Adherence -Treatment Interruptions -Drug Interactions -Strengthening the Immune System -Immune Therapies in Development -Immune Restoration -Interleukin-2 -Immune Restoration Syndrome -Opportunistic Infections -Opportunistic Infections Side Effects and Their Treatments -Side Effects -Fatigue -Anemia -Body Shape Changes (Lipodystrophy) -Diarrhea -Peripheral Neuropathy -Mitochondrial Toxicity -Bone Problems -Depression and HIV Patient Populations -Women and HIV -Pregnancy and HIV aids -Children and HIV -Older People and HIV Alternative and Complementary Therapies -Alternative and Complementary Therapies -Ayurvedic Medicine -Chinese Acupuncture -Chinese Herbalism -Cat's Claw -DHEA -DNCB (Dinitrochlorobenzene) -Echinacea -Essiac -Marijuana -Silymarin (Milk Thistle) -Nutrition -Nutrition -Vitamins and Minerals -Exercise and HIV -Smoking and HIV
The virus that causes AIDS can be transmitted from an infected mother to her newborn child. Without treatment, about 20% of babies of infected mothers get HIV.
Use antiviral medications: The risk of transmitting HIV is extremely low if antiviral medications are used. Transmission rates are only 1% - 2% if the mother takes combination antiviral therapy. The rate is about 4% when the mother takes AZT during the last six months of her pregnancy, and the newborn takes AZT for six weeks after birth. Even if the mother does not take antiviral medications until she is in labor, two methods cut transmission by almost half.
Combining nevirapine and AZT during labor and delivery cuts transmission to only 2%. However, resistance to nevirapine can develop in up to 40% of women who take the single dose. This reduces the success of later antiviral therapy for the mother. Resistance to nevirapine can also be transmitted to newborns through breast feeding. However, the shorter regimens are more affordable for developing countries. Keep delivery time short: The risk of transmission increases with longer delivery times. If the mother uses AZT and has a viral load under 1,000, the risk is almost zero. Mothers with a high viral load might reduce their risk if they deliver their baby by cesarean section (C-section). Do not breast-feed the baby: About 14% of babies will get HIV infection from infected breast milk. This risk can be eliminated if HIV-infected women do not breast-feed babies. Baby formulas should be used. In developing countries there might not be clean water to prepare baby formulas. The World Health Organization believes that the risk of transmitting HIV is less than the risk of using contaminated water for baby formulas. HOW DO WE KNOW IF A NEWBORN IS INFECTED? Most babies born to infected mothers test positive for HIV. Testing positive means you have HIV antibodies in your blood. Babies get HIV antibodies from their mother even if they aren't infected. If babies are infected with HIV, their own immune systems will start to make antibodies. They will continue to test positive. If they are not infected, the mother's antibodies will disappear and the babies will test negative after about 6 to 12 months. Another test, similar to the HIV viral load test, can be used to find out if the baby is infected with HIV. Instead of antibodies, these tests detect the HIV virus in the blood. WHAT ABOUT THE MOTHER'S HEALTH? Recent studies show that HIV-positive women who get pregnant do not get any sicker than those who are not pregnant. Becoming pregnant is not dangerous to the health of an HIV-infected woman. However, "short-course" treatments to prevent infection of a newborn are not the best choice for the mother's health. Combination therapies are the standard treatment. If a pregnant woman takes medications only during labor and delivery, HIV might develop resistance to them. This can cause problems for the future treatment of the mother. A pregnant woman should consider all of the possible problems with antiviral medications.
Some doctors suggest that women interrupt their treatment during the first 3 months of pregnancy for two reasons:
If you have HIV and you are pregnant, or if you want to become pregnant, talk with your doctor about your options for taking care of yourself and reducing the risk of HIV infection or birth defects for your new child. THE BOTTOM LINE An HIV-infected woman who becomes pregnant needs to think about her own health and the health of her new child. Pregnancy does not seem to make the mother's HIV disease any worse. The risk of transmitting HIV to a newborn can be virtually eliminated with "short course" treatments taken only during labor and delivery. But short treatments increase the risk of resistance to the drugs used. This can reduce the success of future treatment for both mother and child. However, the risk of birth defects caused by medications is greater during the first 3 months of pregnancy. If a mother chooses to stop taking some medications during pregnancy, her HIV disease could get worse. Any woman with HIV who is thinking about getting pregnant should carefully discuss treatment options with her doctor. You are here : Home AIDS Factsheet Patient Populations Pregnancy and HIV |
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