To be clear, medications will
transfer into human milk to some degree, although it is very often in low quantities and rarely enough to produce clinically significant doses in the nursing infant.
The current statement is intended to revise the lists of agents
transferred into human milk and describe their possible effects on the infant or on lactation, if known (Tables 1 — 7).
If a pharmacologic or chemical agent does not appear in the tables, it does not mean that it is not
transferred into human milk or that it does not have an effect on the infant; it only indicates that there were no reports found in the literature.
This means alcohol
transfers into human milk with an average milk / plasma ratio of one.
Not exact matches
The
transfer of drugs and therapeutics
into human breast
milk: an update on selected topics.
«The
Transfer of Drugs and Other Chemicals
into Human Milk.»
Written by a world - renown clinical pharmacologist, Dr. Thomas Hale, this drug reference provides includes everything that is known about the
transfer of various medications
into human milk, and the use of radiopharmaceuticals, the use of chemotherapeutic agents, and vaccines in breastfeeding mothers.
A lot of effort has gone
into establishing the marvellous health benefits of
human milk over the past half century, but that doesn't help those many women who are unable to
transfer the
milk from their breasts
into their babies without pain.
American Academy of Pediatrics «The
Transfer of Drugs and Other Chemicals
into Human Milk.»
A 2013 clinical report by the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), «The
Transfer of Drugs and Therapeutics
into Human Breast
Milk: An Update on Selected Topics,» indicates that most medications and immunizations are safe to use during lactation.
Policy Statement: The
Transfer of Drugs and Other Chemicals
Into Human Milk.
Alcohol
transfers readily
into human milk.
A statement on the
transfer of drugs and chemicals
into human milk was first published in 1983,1 with revisions in 19892 and 1994.3 Information continues to become available.
Hausner H, Bredie WL, Mølgaard C, Petersen MA, Møller P 2008, Differential
transfer of dietary flavour compounds
into human breast
milk.
A 2013 study on the
transfer of drugs
into human milk, published in the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) News & Journal, explains how women who are advised to stop nursing when taking medications are given this advice because of the largely errant belief that the drugs may have negative effects on their babies.
The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) has just released a new clinical report, The
Transfer of Drugs and Therapeutics
Into Human Breast
Milk: An Update on Selected Topics, to provide guidance on drug exposure and reaffirm the recommendation that most medications and immunizations are safe during lactation.
Finally, the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) has updated its statement «The
Transfer of Drugs and Therapeutics
Into Human Breast
Milk: An Update on Selected Topics.»