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You Should Continue Breastfeeding (1)
(Drugs and Breastfeeding)
Handout #9a. You should continue breastfeeding
(1) (Drugs and breastfeeding)
Revised January 2005
Written by Jack Newman, MD, FRCPC. © 2005
Introduction
Over the years, far too many women have been wrongly
told they had to stop breastfeeding. The decision about continuing
breastfeeding when the mother takes a drug, for example, is far
more involved than whether the baby will get any in the milk.
It also involves taking into consideration the risks of not
breastfeeding, for the mother, the baby and the family, as
well as society. And there are plenty of risks in not breastfeeding,
so the question essentially boils down to: Does the addition
of a small amount of medication to the mother’s milk make
breastfeeding more hazardous than formula feeding? The
answer is almost never. Breastfeeding
with a little drug in the milk is almost always safer. In other
words, being careful means continuing breastfeeding,
not stopping.
Remember that stopping breastfeeding for a week
may result in permanent weaning since the baby may then not take
the breast again. On the other hand, it should be taken into consideration
that some babies may refuse to take the bottle completely, so
that the advice to stop is not only wrong, but often impractical
as well. On top of that it is easy to advise the mother to pump
her milk while the baby is not breastfeeding, but this is not
always easy in practice and the mother may end up painfully engorged.
Breastfeeding and Maternal Medication
Most drugs appear in the milk, but usually only
in tiny amounts. Although a very few drugs may still cause problems
for infants even in tiny doses, this is not the case for the vast
majority. Nursing mothers who are told they must stop
breastfeeding because of a certain drug should ask the physician
to make sure of this by checking with reliable sources.
Note that the CPS (in Canada) and the PDR (in the USA) are not
reliable sources of information about drugs and breastfeeding.
Or the mother should ask the physician to prescribe an
alternate medication that is acceptable during breastfeeding.
In this day and age, it should not be a problem to find a safe
alternative. If the prescribing physician is not flexible, the
mother should seek another opinion, but not stop breastfeeding.
Why do most drugs appear in the milk in only small
amounts? Because what gets into the milk depends on the concentration
in the mother’s blood and the concentration in the mother’s
blood is often measured in micro- or even nano-grams per millilitre
(millionths or billionths of a gram), whereas the mother takes
the drug in milligrams (thousandths of grams) or even grams. Furthermore,
not all the drug in the mother’s blood can get into the
milk. Only the drug that is not attached to protein in the mother’s
blood can get into the milk. Many drugs are almost completely
attached to protein in the mother’s blood. Thus, the baby
is not getting amounts of drug similar to the mother’s
intake, but almost always, much less on a weight basis. For example,
in one study with the antidepressant paroxetine (Paxil), the mother
got over 300 micrograms per kg per day, whereas the baby got about
1 microgram per kg per day).
Most drugs are safe if:
The following are a few commonly used drugs
considered safe during breastfeeding:
-
Acetaminophen (Tylenol, Tempra), alcohol
(in reasonable amounts), aspirin (in usual doses, for short
periods). Most antiepileptic medications, most antihypertensive
medications, tetracycline, codeine, nonsteroidal
antiinflammatory medications (such as ibuprofen), prednisone,
thyroxin, propylthiourocil (PTU), warfarin,
tricyclic antidepressants, sertraline (Zoloft),
paroxetine (Paxil), other antidepressants,
metronidazole (Flagyl), omperazole
(Losec), Nix, Kwellada.
Note: Though generally safe, fluoxetine
(Prozac) has a very long half life (stays in the body
for a long time). Thus, a baby born to a mother on this
drug during the pregnancy, will have large amounts in
his body, and even the small amount added during breastfeeding
may result in significant accumulation and side effects.
These are rare, but have happened. There are two options
that you might consider:
- Stop the fluoxetine (Prozac) for the last 4 to 8 weeks of
your pregnancy. In this way, you will eliminate the drug from
your body and so will the baby. Once the baby is born, he
will be free of drug and the small amounts in the milk will
not usually cause problems and you can restart the fluoxetine
(Prozac).
- If it is not possible to stop fluoxetine (Prozac) during
your pregnancy, consider changing to another drug that does
not get into the milk in significant amounts once the baby
is born. Two good choices are sertraline (Zoloft) and paroxetine
(Paxil).
- Medications applied to the skin, inhaled (for example, drugs
for asthma) or applied to the eyes or nose are almost always
safe for breastfeeding.
- Drugs for local or regional anaesthesia are not absorbed from
the baby’s stomach and are safe. Drugs for general anaesthesia
will get into the milk in only tiny amounts (like all drugs)
and are extremely unlikely to cause any effects on your baby.
They usually have very short half lives and are eliminated extremely
rapidly from your body. You can breastfeed as soon as you are
awake and up to it.
- Immunizations given to the mother do not require her to stop
breastfeeding. On the contrary, the immunization will help the
baby develop immunity to that immunization, if anything
gets into the milk. In fact, most of the time nothing does
get into the milk, except, possibly some of the live virus immunizations,
such as German Measles. And that’s good, not bad.
- X-rays and scans. Ordinary X-rays do not require a mother
to stop breastfeeding even when used with contrast material
(example, intravenous pyelogram). The reason is that the material
does not get into the milk, and even if it did it would not
be absorbed by the baby. The same is true for CT scans and MRI
scans. You do not have to stop for even a second.
What about radioactive
scans?
We do not want babies to get radioactivity, but
we rarely hesitate to do radioactive scans on them. When a mother
gets a lung scan, or lymphangiogram with radioactive material,
or a bone scan, it is usually done with technetium (though other
materials are possible). Technetium has a half life (the length
of time it takes for ½ of all the drug to leave the body)
of 6 hours, which means that after 5 half lives it will be gone
from the mother’s body. Thus, 30 hours after injection all
of it will be gone and the mother can nurse her baby without concern
about his getting radiation. But does all the radioactivity
need be gone? After 12 hours, 75% of the technetium is gone, and
the concentration in the milk very low. I think that waiting 2
half lives is enough, for a material such as technetium. But:
Not all technetium scans require stopping breastfeeding at all
(HIDA scan, for example). It depends on which molecule the technetium
is attached to. In the first few days, there is very
little milk (though there is enough). In this situation it would
be unnecessary for the mother to stop breastfeeding after a lung
scan, for example. However, one of the most common reasons to
do a lung scan is to diagnose a clot in the lung. This can now
be done better and faster with CT scan, which does not require
interrupting breastfeeding for even 1 second.
If you decide that interruption of breastfeeding
is the best course to follow, then express milk for several days
in advance (if you have advance warning about the test). Only
occasionally is a radioactive scan so urgent that it cannot be
delayed for a few days.
Thyroid scans are different. Radioactive iodine
(I¹³¹) is concentrated in milk and will be ingested
by the baby and it will go to his thyroid where it will stay for
a long time. This is definitely of concern. So, the mother will
have to stop breastfeeding? No, because often the test does not
need to be done at all. Differentiating postpartum thyroiditis
from Graves’ Disease (the most common reason for doing the
scan in nursing mothers) does not require a thyroid scan. Get
more information from the clinic. If a scan needs to be done,
it is possible to do a thyroid scan I¹²³, which
requires stopping for only 12 to 24 hours, depending on the dose
given. Don’t forget to express milk in advance so the baby
can get it instead of formula.
Questions?
see
my book Dr. Jack Newman's Guide to Breastfeeding (called
The
Ultimate Breastfeeding Book of Answers in the USA)
Handout #9a. You should continue breastfeeding
(1) (Drugs and breastfeeding)
Revised January 2005
Written by Jack Newman, MD, FRCPC. © 2005
This
handout may be copied and distributed without further permission,
on
the condition that it is not used in any context in which
the WHO code on the marketing of breastmilk substitutes is violated
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