Allergies during Pregnancy
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Allergies during Pregnancy
Jan 2005
I have severe seasonal allergies - im basically non-functional during the
spring months without medicine. I have taken allegra in the past and
have found that it works great for me. However, now I am 22 weeks
pregnant (our baby is due in June) and am concerned about taking
prescription medicine while pregnant. My doctor has assured me that its
fine, but i dont fully trust this opinion. In the past, i have tried a couple
homeopathic options including nettle leaf pills and accupuncture and
they have not been effective. I have been extremeley careful
throughout my pregnancy and have not taken any medicines at all. Are
there others who know any information about this or who have
experience with this? How have other pregnant and allergic moms-to-
be gotten through this? I would appreciate any info because im
dreading the coming spring months!
genevieve
http://www.motherisk.org/drugs/index.php3
Nice source from Canadian public health authorities re drugs in pregnancy.
Lisa
I also have very severe allergies. My doctor told me to stay
away from Allegra, but said Claritin is OK - you can get
Claritin (or the equivalent) OTC at Costco. Currently pregnant
with my second, I use it when I need to. With my first
pregnancy, though, I didn't take any oral medication but I did
use Flonase once a day (instead of twice) and it worked better
than anything else I've tried. There's little research on it,
but I felt safer with it since it was a localized spray.
Colleen
I had this problem. When I was about 17-18 weeks along in my
last pregnancy, the Acacia trees bloomed early and heavily,
which meant I was in agony -- I couldn't breathe. I was
totally cloudy from the congestion, and my eyes burned. ! ; I
mentioned this to my doctor, and I had concerns over taking
allergy medicines, but she said it's not particularly good for
the baby either if I can't breathe or sleep. So, we looked
into my favorite allergy medicine -- Allegra. Allegra was a
category ''C'' teratogen (meaning, I think, that there was no
clear evidence that it would harm a human fetus, but there
hadn't been sufficient studies, or something...) Zyrtec was a
category B, which was safer, so I took that one.
Later on I took small doses of Sudafed. There was some
evidence that after the first trimester it was relatively safe -
- some evidence of temporarily elevated heart rates in a fetus,
inconclusive data. But I just couldn't breathe at all, or
function. The baby was born healthy and has suffered no
visible effects, and she's almost 2 now, so it worked out fine
for me.
Hope this helps!
Stacey
hello fellow allergy sufferer! I too heard that allegra,
claratin, etc. were perfectly safe during pregnancy but I was
still reluctant to take anything. luckily acupuncture worked
for me. how about a nasal spray like flonase or nasalcrom? the
netty pot to keep your sinuses drained/cleaned? good luck my
friend.
virginia
I had allergies compounded by severe pregnancy-induced nasal
congestion during my first pregnancy. My OBGyn sent me to my
internist, who prescribed Flo-nase. He said it would not affect
the baby during the middle trimester but that I should wean
myself down to every other day and then less in my last
trimester--which is what I did. It was a life-saver. I just could
not breathe without som! e help. Other than that, I was attempting
to go through my pregnancy with no medication and had weaned
myself from caffeine. But it was hell not being able to breathe,
and I'm very glad that I sought help. The Flo-nase worked very
well. The last trimester was a bit difficult, but I survived. I
do not believe that my son was affected by it at all.
(The very odd thing is that, with my son's birth, my allergies
temporarily disappeared. They came back when my daughter was born
three years later. But I didn't need any medication during my
second pregnancy.)
Gwynne
i also have been an allegra 'addict' for years and was concerned that i wouldn't
survive without it. i have (had) seasonal allergies, including molds and acacia in
winter, since my teen years. Much to my great surprise, i really didn't, and still
don't,
need the allegra. the pregnancy changed something in me, i just don't suffer as
much. maybe that was luck. i found that the only antihistamine rated class B for
pregnancy is benedryl, so i took that at night only when i really needed something. i
took steamy showers and used saline nasal spray to keep my sinuses clean. saline
spray ! is amazing - its our whole family's first line of defense now. congratulations
and good luck.
anon
I can certainly empathize with your situation. I was also pregnant and due in the
summer (late July 2004). Like you, I was dreading the spring months due to my
allergies. Before I was pregnant, I took clarinex and used a nasal spray every day
during the allergy season. I was reluctant to take any medications during pregnancy
and went without them. The first few weeks were tough. I went to work with watery
eyes, runny nose, constant sneezing, and a tickle in my throat. Luckily, the
symptoms only lasted for a few weeks. Amazingly, pregnancy must have brought
about some positive changes to my body. After several weeks, the symptoms
vanished.
After I gave birth (7-28-04), my allergy symptoms did not return.
Since I am unfamiliar with alternative forms of treatment for allergies, I am unable to
offer any advice in this matter. But I thought it might be helpful to share my
experience with you. Cross your fingers and hope for the best. In the end, it will be
all worth it.
Annie
Try to use an Alkalol nasal irrigation - it sounds gross but it's
know to cut down on allergies etc. My ENT recommended it. You can
get it at any pharmacy (Safeway on Broadway can order it)
Google on Alkalol and you get some description on how to use it.
Steff
Hi there. Sister, do I feel for you. As if carrying around 30+
extra pounds isn't hard enough, to have to have itchy, watery
eyes, sneezy, runny nose, scratchy throat. Ugh! I was still
living on the East Coast when pregnant and always had awful
seasonal allergies there. The only thing that ever worked for
me was nasal steroids (vancanase). I took nothing for the first
week or so but was miserable. Then I got sick from having all
of that mucous in my system (the only time during my entire
pregnancy that I threw up). Desperate, I asked my midwife if
the! nasal steroids would be safe. She's a homebirth midwife,
whose pretty adament about keeping things totally natural (she
doesn't even like ultrasounds). Her opinion was that since the
nasal steroids are localized, they are a safe option for
someone who can not function without some sort of allergy
medication. She felt it was better for me to address my
allergies than to continue to lose sleep and throw up. I was
able to get away with a lower dose than recommended but it
still worked. My daughter was more than 9 lbs when born,
healthy and alert so I see no side affects from the nasal
steroids. Whatever you choose to do, I wish you a healthy and
sneeze-free remainder of your pregnancy. Good luck!
missng the snow but not the ragweed
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