1) What's Happening
2) Tip for Morning Sickness
3) Highlights from the Message Boards
4) Cytotec: Dangerous Experiment or Panacea?
5) Rhogam: A Discussion
1) What's Happening
Hi Everyone! Just a quick note to let you know what's new at the Pregnancy
Community. I have added a new feature to the main page!! Send me your birth
announcement at pregnancy@mothersnature.com and I will put it on the main
page. I thought this would be a nice way for you to let all your friends know
at Mother's Nature that your baby has arrived! Send in your baby's name,
birth weight, and date of birth. Last names, place of birth and photo are
optional. Check it out soon to see my nephew's birth announcement! :-)
The current Info Alley article of the week is: How to Prepare Your Child For
A New Baby by Jennifer VanLaanen-Smit aka MangoMama. Coming soon is an
article on Tips for Nausea--look for it in the next couple days! Scroll down
now for a recipe for nausea tea. Check out
Info Alley
for other informative articles and great reading!
CHAT is back!!
Look for me the first Monday of every month at 7pm CST, 8pm EST.
Hope everyone is feeling well and enjoying the Autumn season!! I look forward
to chatting with you on the message boards and in the chat room!
As always, feel free to email me with any questions, comments, or suggestions
at: pregnancy@mothersnature.com
~Hannah
2) An electrolyte-balancing tea for nausea in pregnancy:
1/2 cup lemon juice, 1/3 cup honey,1/4 teaspoon salt, 1 calcium
tablet, powdered (not bone meal of dolomite), water to make
one quart. Have the woman take spoonfuls at regular
intervals.
-Virginia Hege Tobiassen, "Am I Glowing Yet? Understanding
and Coping with the Common and Not-So-Common Miseries of
Pregnancy." (Available at 2837 Frank Dillard Rd., West
Jefferson, NC 28694. Tell Virginia that Midwifery Today
E-News sent you!)
3) From the Message Boards:
Spookymom33 writes on the Trying to Conceive Board:
Back in February there was a post asking about the fertility tester using
saliva. There was also a response saying that it worked. I tried to find the
company "Birthworks" which I did. I can't find any items listed at their site
for the tester (although there is a lot of really wonderful products and
doula, childbirth info!). I did find a site here that sells them. They are
$39.95 each plus $4.95 shipping. Here is the address:
www.ovu-tec.com
I hope that this helps out, I'm going to get one I think. It took 1 1/2 years
to concieve our first child and (Damien 11/9/99) and we are now trying for
our second. I'm hoping this will help us out. Buying those ovulation testers
is way too expensive, so this looks like a good alternative!
Thanks Spookymom!!
4) Cytotec: Dangerous Experiment or Panacea?
By Ina May Gaskin
July 11, 2000 | On Nov. 12, 1998, a week before her sixth baby was due,
Holly's nurse-midwife agreed to induce her labor. While there were no
medical reasons for induction -- one of Holly's five daughters had weighed 9
pounds 4 ounces and had been born after only five minutes -- the
nurse-midwife contends that Holly complained of being tired of being
pregnant. Before consenting to the induction, Holly's midwife says, she
asked one of the obstetricians in her group practice if Holly would be a
good candidate to try a new induction drug. He approved the prescription.
Holly disputes her midwife's story, asserting that the midwife recommended
induction against Holly's better judgment. "My body was made to have
babies," she told me. With five vaginal births to her credit, Holly had
confidence in her ability to labor.
Whatever the truth, both parties agree that over the next several hours the
nurse-midwife gave Holly three 25-microgram doses of Cytotec. (Because of
legal considerations, both parties requested anonymity.) What Holly didn't
know and the midwife never told her was that it was an unapproved drug with
potentially disastrous side effects.
One hour after the third dose, labor began, with contractions every two and
a half minutes. According to Holly's 19-year-old daughter, Ann, who was
present throughout labor, Holly handled herself very well.
Thirty hours later, her cervix not yet fully open, Holly stood up and
walked around. Then her bag of water broke. A little later she heard a
popping sound from her body. The midwife monitoring her labor noticed that
the baby's heart rate had dived from a normal 130-140 beats to a frightening
40 beats per minute.
She exhorted Holly to push, and within five minutes, Holly's 8-pound,
13-ounce daughter was born, followed by a huge gush of blood. The baby was
blue and didn't breathe on her own, so the resuscitation team intubated her.
Holly, meanwhile, continued to bleed. Frightened, she told her midwife that
something was wrong. The midwife assured her that her blood loss was not
enough to warrant a doctor's presence. Later, realizing that Holly was
bleeding excessively, the midwife removed several huge clots from her
vagina, gave her medication to stop the bleeding and left her in the care of
nurses.
Ann and Darryl, Holly's husband, were far from reassured. By this time,
Holly lay unconscious, white as a ghost. They helplessly watched her
struggle for breath. Darryl begged the nurses to get a doctor and the
midwife directed a nurse to call for a doctor on the intercom. The physician
who entered the birth room two minutes later was shocked at Holly's
condition. "This lady is dying," he shouted. "I'm taking her to the O.R.!"
Holly's heart stopped twice during the surgery. At one point, the doctor
told Darryl that he did not expect her to survive. Her uterus had ruptured
from the top down through the cervix. This kind of wound is characteristic
of Cytotec-related ruptures, according to obstetricians I've since spoken
to. (One doctor described them to me as "totally exploding.") Surgeons
removed Holly's uterus along with one of her ovaries and a fallopian tube.
Thirty-seven units of blood, plasma and platelets were required to replace
the blood lost during her ordeal. Gone forever was her chance to have
another baby.
Was Holly's labor a nightmare fated to happen, with or without
intervention? Or did Cytotec cause her uterine rupture, thereby threatening
her and her daughter's life? As with so many forms of obstetric
intervention, even hindsight isn't 20/20. Every birth is unique, and the
influences on labor are far more numerous than most studies can account for.
And even with large, long-term, controlled studies, it is sometimes
complicated to ferret out the facts about the efficacy or safety of a given
medical procedure.
Cytotec, however, doesn't have the benefit of such scientific debate,
because it is still essentially an experimental birth drug that is being
tested ad hoc by trial and error. But most patients are never informed of
this fact.
As a midwife of 30 years and one of the founders of the natural childbirth
movement, I have overseen more than 2,000 births at my birthing center in
Summertown, Tenn. Over the years I've listened to innumerable anecdotes
about the dangers of medical intervention. But the stories I was hearing
about Cytotec I found especially unsettling.
Over the past three years I have watched in increasing dismay as this once
little-known ulcer medication has become a popular obstetric drug -- one
with potentially horrifying side effects and a frightening lack of safety
protocols. Buried in study after study, reports show that the drug has been
connected to numerous cases of ruptured uteri and even a few maternal
deaths, stillbirths and newborn deaths. Despite these reports, however,
tales like Holly's -- in labors attended by practitioners who appear to have
little understanding of the drug's potential dangers -- continued to reach
me. In fact, the widespread use of Cytotec essentially amounts to a massive
medical experiment carried out on thousands of unsuspecting women -- a
situation, sadly, that is all too common in the world of modern obstetrics.
Most Cytotec-induced labors do not cause adverse effects like those in
Holly's labor -- in fact, for a significant number of women Cytotec seems to
work amazingly well. In a way, that's what scares me the most. Since it
works so efficiently for a majority and can be prescribed obstetrically
without Food and Drug Administration approval, there's less motivation for
learning why for some women the drug has a catastrophic effect. Aside from
the oft-cited though widely ignored warnings against giving it to women who
have had Caesarean sections, we know very little about which women are at
risk.
What we do know about Cytotec is that it is dirt cheap: A single 25-mcg
dose costs roughly 13 cents; Pitocin, in contrast, necessitates hundreds of
dollars in high-tech intervention. Since Cytotec is made in 100-mcg tablets
to be taken orally, its quarter-tab dosages are necessarily inaccurate:
Nurses or doctors have to literally cut up the pills with little knives.
Furthermore, there is still no agreement as to the dosage size or interval
or even most appropriate route of administration. The most common means of
administration, by placing a quarter-tablet next to the cervix, is so easy
that some doctors and midwives give the pills to women to take home and
insert themselves. As a result, some women who experience emergency
complications like Holly's do so without a hospital staff to care for them.
Unlike a Pitocin drip, which has a half-life in the body of about 10
minutes and can easily be turned off if the woman responds to it violently,
once Cytotec is administered, you can't get it out and nobody knows its
half-life. This gives Cytotec an unpredictable, stealthy quality. Sometimes
even when it is doing serious damage to the uterus, the woman has no
awareness that something's wrong; other times it creates immediate violent
contractions. Moreover, the ruptures can occur many hours after a single
dose in which the drug seemed to have caused no adverse effects. No one
understands how this works, but it has been the subject of discussion both
in the medical literature and in physician chat rooms.
Finally, in an era of managed-care obstetrics in which doctors are seeing
patients in their offices at the same time that they monitor other women's
labors across town in the hospital by telephone, Cytotec's great claim to
fame -- prompt, timely labors -- is a phenomenal boon. In most cases an
obstetrician must be present at the time the baby is born to be paid in full
for a birth. So financial factors may influence some doctors to induce labor
at a convenient time. Moreover, most cases of malpractice litigation involve
situations in which doctors were not present and an adverse outcome
occurred. Hence doctors have ulterior motives for using drugs like Cytotec,
which help speed labor and thereby ensure that they won't miss the big
event.
How many women are being given Cytotec? Marsden Wagner, a Washington, D.C.,
perinatal epidemiologist, estimates that every year at least 150,000 U.S.
women (about 3 percent of all births) are given Cytotec to start labor. But
based on my conversations with other doctors and nurses, I sense that the
number may be much higher. Its usage is certainly growing rapidly. Wagner
also notes that the Oregon State Health Department recently told him that
Cytotec is now the state's most common method of induction.
How did Cytotec become so widely used and yet remain so underresearched? In
1992 and 1993 the first reports of the obstetric use of the small white
tablet -- generically known as misoprostol -- indicated that it could be
highly effective for starting labor in women, whether or not their cervixes
were ripe. (In contrast Pitocin, the most common induction drug, often
doesn't work unless the cervix is already primed and therefore affords
doctors fewer choices.) Cytotec had already been used in combination with
other drugs as a chemical abortive -- why not use it as an induction
medicine? Lacking other information, many physicians began incorporating it
into their practices.
A few years passed before the first published reports appeared detailing
Cytotec's adverse effects on labor induction. By then, word of mouth in
medical circles had made Cytotec the new darling of American obstetrics.
Cost-effective, quick and easy to administer, Cytotec was fast becoming a
popular alternative to Pitocin, which requires a full high-tech approach,
including I.V., continual fetal monitoring and often (because of its
reputation for triggering especially painful contractions) an epidural.
Cytotec, in contrast, can be administered (though it shouldn't be) in
virtually any setting.
Just how many women have been hurt by Cytotec? The question is nearly
impossible to answer. No one has done large-scale studies of the drug, and
the doctors and midwives who administer it do so with such vastly different
protocols that mixing and matching results from various studies would not
render reliable data. The most rigorous scientific authority in English on
the effects of healthcare, the Cochrane Library, cautions that too few
well-designed studies have been carried out to assess the risk factors
associated with using Cytotec for labor induction. While conceding that
Cytotec is more effective than conventional methods of cervical ripening and
labor induction, it cautions that "the apparent increase in uterine
hyperstimulation is of concern."
Unable to find large-scale, comprehensive reporting on obstetric use of the
drug, I decided to do a little statistical sleuthing (however unscientific)
on my own. My research, and my gut sense, based on years of experience as a
midwife, indicate that there are significant risks associated with Cytotec,
certainly higher risks than those associated with other forms of induction
like Pitocin. Combining the results in 20 studies of Cytotec-induced labors
published in peer-reviewed journals and papers presented at professional
meetings -- a total of 1,958 births -- I discovered a total of two maternal
deaths, 16 baby deaths, 19 uterine ruptures and two life-threatening
hysterectomies.
To make sense of these figures, consider the normal incidence of uterine
rupture, the most common serious side effect of Cytotec. Uterine rupture
virtually never occurs in spontaneous (unaugmented) labor in women who've
had no previous uterine surgery. Probably because of differing practices
surrounding labor induction and augmentation, the rate of uterine rupture
varies widely from hospital to hospital. Uterine rupture is less likely to
happen in an out-of-hospital birth. Most midwives providing these services
do not use drugs to augment labor. The complication has been reported as
frequently as one in every 100 births and as rarely as one in every 11,000
births. In my own group practice at the Farm Midwifery Center in Summertown,
Tenn., in approximately 2,100 births we have had no uterine ruptures.
By contrast, approximately one in 100 Cytotec-induced births in the 20
studies I looked at resulted in uterine rupture. About half occurred in
women having vaginal birth after Caesarean, the others among women who had
had no previous uterine surgery.
In fact, it is women who have had Caesareans who are at greatest risk from
Cytotec. An article published in 1999 in the American Journal of Obstetrics
and Gynecology reported that uterine rupture occurred in five of 89 women
with previous Caesarean delivery whose labors were induced with Cytotec --
about one out of 16, a shockingly high figure, representing a more than
28-fold increase over those who did not have Cytotec induction for VBAC
(vaginal birth after Caesarean). One of the five ruptures also caused a baby
to die.
According to epidemiologist Wagner, "It can be reliably estimated that
between 1990 and 1999, as a result of the widespread off-label use of
Cytotec for vaginal birth after Caesarean section, well over 3,000 women in
the United States suffered a ruptured uterus, resulting in at least 100 dead
newborn babies."
Amniotic fluid embolism, or AFE, is perhaps the most frightening
complication associated with powerful labor-inducing drugs like Cytotec and
Pitocin. AFE, which occurs when the amniotic fluid enters the mother's
bloodstream, is one of the most dangerous complications that can happen in
birth. More than 60 percent of women and their babies die when it occurs,
with survivors usually suffering neurological impairment.
The rate of occurrence of AFE, once thought to occur only once in 80,000
births, seems to be rising in the United States. Chicago writer Deanna
Isaacs, whose daughter died from AFE in 1994, found that the incidence of
AFE at the Phoenix, Ariz., hospital where her daughter died in labor was 1
in only 6,500 births. AFE is now one of the leading causes of maternal death
in the United States. Two cases of fatal AFE are associated in the medical
literature with the use of Cytotec; a midwife told me about a third.
Alarmingly high as these figures are, they almost certainly don't reflect
all of the adverse outcomes associated with Cytotec. I also gathered
information -- much of it hair-raising -- from Internet chat-room
discussions involving physicians who signed their names to their comments,
as well as from obstetricians and midwives. This is anecdotal evidence, yes.
But we can't afford to ignore anecdotes because current medical studies are
inadequate, the drug has not been subject to FDA approval and mothers' and
infants' lives are at stake.
The enthusiastic discussion of Cytotec in medical chat rooms sheds light on
why the drug has become so popular in the United States. "You can almost
count on a delivery 12 hours after inserting the Cytotec tablet," said one
doctor. Another doctor added a cautionary note: "I must say that I have
heard some great things about Cytotec myself. I know some people who have
used it and say that they have pretty good luck with it. It sounds like your
ladies are pretty happy with its effects -- two-hour labors and such. Just
be careful. I would have to say that the biggest danger is leaving the woman
alone. The stuff turns the cervix to complete MUSHIE [emphasis in original]
and opens it with a couple of contractions. So whatever you do, remember
that you must not stay gone too long."
Over the past 30 years, I have watched as wave after wave of medical fads
have washed over the institution of modern childbirth. But one thing,
unfortunately, hasn't changed: The push to discover a panacea to cure the
pain and inconvenience of childbirth drives doctors to experiment -- and the
women are usually the last to know.
In this case, to be sure, the demands of the women themselves are part of
the problem. The Cytotec controversy is inextricably tied up with the
increasing rate of induced labor in the U.S. Until fairly recently, induced
labors were fairly rare: Now, one birth in five is induced, with only a
small percentage of these inductions being medically necessary. Harried
doctors in the HMO age are driving some of this, but women, too, are
demanding faster labors. (This is not surprising, considering that the
United States has the shortest maternity leave in the industrialized world.)
If this trend increases, we can expect to see an accompanying rise in the
medical problems that result when the strongest muscle in the human body --
which is also paper thin -- is stimulated to contract violently.
How was it that Cytotec came to be used as an obstetric drug in the first
place? Misoprostol was originally developed by G.D. Searle & Co. of Chicago
to prevent gastric ulcers in people who take anti-inflammatory drugs such as
aspirin for arthritis pain. In 1988, it was approved by the FDA solely for
this use. Yet it is quite legal for physicians to prescribe drugs for
indications other than those for which the drug has received FDA approval.
This common practice, known as "off-label" use, usually involves
prescribing one drug for another purpose. (Incidentally, no such loopholes
exist for the use of pharmaceutical drugs in most Western European
countries.) With misoprostol the practice seems particularly egregious:
taking a medication meant for oral ingestion and inserting it vaginally.
According to Claudia Kovitz, public affairs specialist for Searle, the
company does not intend to apply for FDA approval of Cytotec's use in
starting labor. Indeed, why should it? At 13 cents a dose, with women taking
no more than three doses per birth, the drug is too cost-effective to waste
a heap of money on research whose primary result might only be to make the
drug illegal to prescribe.
So what protection do pregnant women have when it comes to drugs that are
prescribed for another purpose? Very little, according to Laura Bradbard,
spokeswoman for the FDA. "People think we have more authority than we have.
We approve a product for a particular indication, based on the data we
receive. A physician is free to use a drug for any use he or she feels will
benefit a patient. There are no safe drugs. You need to do your homework,
ask a lot of questions and speak with your physician about your case and the
medications," Bradbard said.
And even when the FDA approves a drug, there are no guarantees. "Once a
drug reaches the marketplace, that's when we find out all the adverse
events, because we have only seen it in 3,000 to 6,000 people perhaps," said
Bradbard. "Then it goes into the marketplace, where you have a million
prescriptions. Then a reporter will say to me, 'You are approving things too
fast. You didn't find it.' Well, we can't find it. It's mathematically
impossible. We have to have it in the marketplace and then we have to make
warnings."
But Holly and her husband, like most patients who receive Cytotec, never
received any warning. "We didn't know it wasn't FDA approved," she said. "We
would have never let them use me or my baby as guinea pigs."
*** NOTICE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material
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5) Rhogam: A Discussion
Clinical trials showed that in the control groups of women
who were not given Rhogam, between 3.49 percent and 13.29
percent of women were immunized at six months. This implies
that over 86 percent of women did not need Rhogam.
Unfortunately, nobody attempted to determine who these women
were, but went on to administer Rhogam to all women at risk.
The result of this trial is that we have a routine
intervention which may not be necessary for the majority of
women....
Two major states are involved in rhesus isoimmunization:
transplacental hemorrhage and antibody
formation....Researchers seem to agree that transplacental
hemorrhage is seen only in around 15 percent of cases where
a rhesus negative woman carries a rhesus positive baby.
We also do not know whether transplacental hemorrhage is
related to maternal or birth-related factors, although a
study of the incidence of transplacental hemorrhage during
curettage following abortion found that trauma to the uterus
increased this. Conceivably, the same is true during birth,
with the likelihood of transplacental hemorrhage being
increased by interventions such as managed third stage,
manual removal of the placenta, or caesarean delivery....
It has been assumed that transplacental hemorrhage
automatically leads to antibody formation, although Woodrow
et al have suggested that some women may be more likely to
produce antibodies following transplacental hemorrhage than
others. Of the women who had a negative Kleihauer in their
study, only 3.6 percent had developed antibodies six months
after delivery. These researchers proposed that, if anti-D
had not developed within six months after delivery, it was
unlikely to do so later.
-Sara Wickham, excerpted from
"Rhogam: do Midwives Hold the Evidence?", Midwifery Today
Issue 46
Reprinted from Midwifery Today E-News (Issue No. 2:35 August, 2000)
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