Many people get pregnant unexpectedly. Can you get pregnant after drinking? Does pregnancy affect during medication?

Many unexpected pregnancies will have such and such situations before pregnancy, fearing that it will be bad for the baby. For example, if you get pregnant unexpectedly after drinking alcohol, take a chest X-ray after physical examination, or find out that you are pregnant after taking cold medicine, will these situations affect your baby?

Can a pregnant child be born after drinking?

If you drink a little occasionally, you can get pregnant. Because of a small amount of alcohol stimulation, a woman's body can be metabolized and will not cause abortion and spontaneous abortion. If women often drink alcohol after pregnancy, it will also adversely affect the development of the nervous system of pregnant women and embryos, and the probability of fetal malformation may increase.

From the perspective of prenatal and postnatal care, women should pay attention to avoid the stimulation of unfavorable factors such as alcohol and tobacco during pregnancy, and the adverse effect on the fetus after pregnancy can only be the increase of probability. If women have high expectations for the fetus after pregnancy, they can also have regular obstetric examinations. It is not that the fetal development 100% is abnormal due to pregnancy, but they can make a decision after weighing the pros and cons under the guidance of a doctor.

Unexpected pregnancy after taking medicine, will the baby have it?

Expectant mothers often rush to the clinic to consult a doctor: just found pregnant, gastroenteritis a few days ago, and took anti-inflammatory drugs. Is the child all right? This problem should be analyzed separately, generally depending on the time of taking medicine. If taking medicine occurs within 28 days of pregnancy (from the last menstruation), it is called safety period. If there is no sign of miscarriage, it means that the drug has not affected the embryo and can give birth to a child.

However, if the medicine is taken within 29 days to 8 weeks of pregnancy, this period is a period of high sensitivity, and the embryo is most sensitive to the influence of drugs, and teratogenic drugs can lead to fetal malformation. Doctors should be consulted in time for detailed follow-up examination. Most doctors would recommend letting the baby fall.

Bian Xiao comments: Drugs may have an impact on the fetus, but not all drugs have an impact on the fetus. Embryos are naturally eliminated. If the drug has a great influence on the fetus, most embryos will not be preserved. Generally speaking, if you don't take drugs that are prohibited during pregnancy, you only need to have regular obstetric examinations and B-ultrasound at 20 weeks, if the baby is fine.

I had a chest X-ray before I found out I was pregnant. Can the baby be born?

Chest X-ray and chest X-ray are medical radiation. Many expectant mothers have unconsciously participated in physical examinations and received medical irradiation. Will it affect the fetus? X-rays may cause fetal malformation. If medical irradiation is performed without knowledge, such as chest radiograph, dental photography, gastrointestinal system fluoroscopy and barium enema, spine photography, mammography, etc. The radiation dose is relatively small, which is still the law of natural elimination. If the embryo does not flow naturally, pregnancy can continue. If the expectant mother is not at ease, she should have regular check-ups, pay more attention to fetal movement, and seek medical advice in time if she finds any abnormality.

Bian Xiao's comments: In order to avoid the uninformed X-rays affecting the baby, expectant mothers should pay special attention to the arrival date of menstruation. Generally, taking medicine, drinking and taking X-rays within 30 days of pregnancy has little effect on the baby. In addition, unqualified embryos will automatically flow out in the first trimester, and most of them can be left as healthy babies. Prospective parents can rest assured!

I have been vaccinated before pregnancy, can my baby still be vaccinated?

There are generally two kinds of vaccines, inactivated vaccine and live virus vaccine. At present, there is no conclusive evidence that vaccination during pregnancy will pose a risk to the fetus. However, for live virus vaccine, women who may be pregnant within 3 months should not be vaccinated in principle, and there is a risk of allergic reaction, so use it with caution. Vaccines that can be used during pregnancy: rabies vaccine, tetanus toxoid, polio vaccine, influenza vaccine and hepatitis B vaccine. Vaccines banned during pregnancy include rubella vaccine and mumps vaccine.

Bian Xiao comments: The teratogenic effect of rubella virus on fetus is obvious, especially in the first three months of pregnancy. Therefore, expectant mothers who plan to get pregnant can be vaccinated at least 3 months (preferably half a year) before planning to get pregnant. But you have to be vaccinated for 3 months to get pregnant. The same is true of mumps vaccine, and contraception should be strictly controlled within 3 months after vaccination.

Taking oral contraceptives during pregnancy, can the baby take them?

Although there are more and more contraceptive methods in today's era, contraception is not 100% successful. If you get pregnant during oral contraceptives, you can only blame your personality. Because most oral contraceptives contain estrogen that inhibits ovulation and progesterone that makes it difficult for sperm to pass through cervical mucus, endometrial cells are not easy to accept embryo implantation, and these hormones have an impact on the intrauterine environment. Therefore, from the perspective of eugenics, it is best not to get pregnant when taking oral contraceptives.

Bian Xiao comments: If the expectant mother really doesn't want to abort the baby, it's not impossible to insist on keeping the baby. After 6-8 weeks of pregnancy, villi can be extracted for chromosome examination; At 16-20 weeks of pregnancy, amniocentesis was performed to check whether the chromosome of amniotic fluid cells was normal. At the same time, dynamically observe the content of alpha-fetoprotein in maternal blood, and pay attention to whether the size, shape and visceral structure of the fetus are normal under B-ultrasound. Once an abnormality is found, the pregnancy should be terminated in time to avoid giving birth to an abnormal baby.

Trouble? Therefore, if you plan to take oral contraceptives for a long time to get pregnant, you should stop taking contraceptives six months before pregnancy for safety reasons.