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-   -   STD's and babies (https://www.askmehelpdesk.com/showthread.php?t=233349)

  • Jul 3, 2008, 12:10 AM
    Brittany124
    STD's and babies
    If you have genital warts can you pass it to your baby? Will it have warts on it when its born? Can the doctors treat it and cure it?
  • Jul 3, 2008, 12:22 AM
    J_9
    Genital warts are not curable. Yes, they can be passed on to baby if there is a vaginal delivery when the lesions are present. Most doctors prefer to do a ceserean section if lesions are present.
  • Jul 3, 2008, 12:27 AM
    tickle
    This is an excerpt from a fact sheet from the Department of Health and Human Services on STDs and pregnant women:

    STDs can have many of the same consequences for pregnant women as women who are not pregnant. STDs can cause cervical and other cancers, chronic hepatitis, pelvic inflammatory disease, infertility, and other complications. Many STDs in women are silent; that is, without signs or symptoms.

    STDs can be passed from a pregnant woman to the baby before, during, or after the baby's birth. Some STDs (like syphilis) cross the placenta and infect the baby while it is in the uterus (womb). Other STDs (like gonorrhea, chlamydia, hepatitis B, and genital herpes) can be transmitted from the mother to the baby during delivery as the baby passes through the birth canal. HIV can cross the placenta during pregnancy, infect the baby during the birth process, and unlike most other STDs, can infect the baby through breastfeeding.

    A pregnant woman with an STD may also have early onset of labor, premature rupture of the membranes surrounding the baby in the uterus, and uterine infection after delivery.

    The harmful effects of STDs in babies may include stillbirth (a baby that is born dead), low birth weight (less than five pounds), conjunctivitis (eye infection), pneumonia, neonatal sepsis (infection in the baby's blood stream), neurologic damage, blindness, deafness, acute hepatitis, meningitis, chronic liver disease, and cirrhosis. Most of these problems can be prevented if the mother receives routine prenatal care, which includes screening tests for STDs starting early in pregnancy and repeated close to delivery, if necessary. Other problems can be treated if the infection is found at birth.
  • Mar 31, 2009, 08:06 PM
    AmandaCarreras

    I've been told that If you have Genital Warts the doctors would prefer not to deliver the baby but I guess some do a C-Section..
  • Apr 1, 2009, 03:32 AM
    J_9
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by AmandaCarreras View Post
    I've been told that If you have Genital Warts the doctors would prefer not to deliver the baby but I guess some do a C-Section..

    If you don't deliver the baby how do you get it out other than a C-Section?:confused:
  • Apr 1, 2009, 03:33 PM
    AmandaCarreras
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by J_9 View Post
    If you don't deliver the baby how do you get it out other than a C-Section?:confused:

    Usually the doctors know that you have genital warts and won't let you got through with the pregnancy... so you would have to have an abortion or I think the doctors will ask you if you want to go through with it and then tell you what can happen to the baby due to the genital warts, like the baby can be born blind and other effects... Im not really sure though I'm just going by what I heard.
  • Apr 1, 2009, 03:46 PM
    J_9
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by AmandaCarreras View Post
    Usually the doctors know that you have genital warts and wont let you got through with the pregnancy... so you would have to have an abortion or i think the doctors will ask you if you wanna go through with it and then tell you what can happen to the baby due to the genital warts, like the baby can be born blind and other effects... Im not really sure though im just going by what i heard.

    This is completely untrue. Women with genital warts successfully carry babies to term every day. Abortion is NOT necessary. Vaginal delivery is appropriate if there is not an active breakout. If an active breakout is happening at or near delivery, a ceserean section is performed.
  • Apr 1, 2009, 05:10 PM
    twinkiedooter
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by J_9 View Post
    If you don't deliver the baby how do you get it out other than a C-Section?:confused:

    J-9 - Silly Rabbit the Stork delivers those babies! LOL Oh, that's right you are a delivery nurse so you should know just who delivers babies... the doctor does, the old fashioned way with your capable help.
  • Apr 1, 2009, 05:18 PM
    J_9
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by twinkiedooter View Post
    J-9 - Silly Rabbit the Stork delivers those babies!! LOL Oh, that's right you are a delivery nurse so you should know just who delivers babies.... the doctor does, the old fashioned way with your capable help.

    Shhh, the stork sneaks in at night, someone has to be there in the receiving department when he shows up. That's why I work nights. ;)
  • Apr 2, 2009, 04:02 AM
    tickle

    I heard if the stork has warts, he can't touch the baby. So he yells for the nurse.

    Tick
  • Apr 2, 2009, 04:23 AM
    J_9
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by tickle View Post
    I heard if the stork has warts, he can't touch the baby. So he yells for the nurse.

    tick

    Ms. Tick, what if the nurse has warts?
  • Apr 2, 2009, 04:32 AM
    tickle

    Yes, I had considered that, so then the stork flies away and the baby can't be delivered because everyone has warts. And I guess the baby would have to crawl out itsel avoiding its mommy's warts, I guessf. Or something like that. Problem solved !

    Tick
  • Apr 2, 2009, 04:39 AM
    J_9
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by tickle View Post
    yes, I had considered that, so then the stork flies away and the baby can't be delivered because everyone has warts. And I guess the baby would have to crawl out itsel avoiding its mommy's warts, I guessf. Or something like that. Problem solved !

    tick

    I knew delivering babies was complicated (since I do it 3 nights a week), but, wow, that poor baby. All the decisions it has to make before it even sees the light of day.
  • Apr 2, 2009, 05:36 AM
    tickle

    Better to learn how now, then later

    Tick
  • Apr 2, 2009, 12:28 PM
    AmandaCarreras
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by J_9 View Post
    This is completely untrue. Women with genital warts successfully carry babies to term every day. Abortion is NOT necessary. Vaginal delivery is appropriate if there is not an active breakout. If an active breakout is happening at or near delivery, a ceserean section is performed.


    Yeah but then the baby has herpes and has to live with it.
  • Apr 2, 2009, 01:30 PM
    J_9
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by AmandaCarreras View Post
    Yeah but then the baby has herpes and has to live with it.

    The baby does not always have herpes. And there are preventative measures given the baby immediately after delivery whether it is a vaginal delivery or a surgical delivery.

    Believe me, I delivery babies for a living as well as working in a newborn nursery.

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