Commentary

Pregnancy and NSAIDs


 

Nevertheless, given the frequency of use of these medications in pregnant women in the first trimester, this study suggests that caution might be exercised in situations in which casual or indiscriminate use of these medications in early pregnancy could be avoided.

Dr. Chambers is associate professor of pediatrics and family and preventive medicine at the University of California, San Diego. She is director of the California Teratogen Information Service and Clinical Research Program. Dr. Chambers is a past president of the Organization of Teratology Information Specialists and past president of the Teratology Society. She said she had no relevant financial disclosures.

Pages

Recommended Reading

17P Not Effective Once Preterm Labor Begins
MDedge ObGyn
Baby Can Wait: Hospitals Curb Early Elective Deliveries
MDedge ObGyn
Evidence Suggests Pregnancies Can Survive Maternal Cancer Treatment
MDedge ObGyn
Telbivudine Cut Mother-to-Infant Hepatitis B Transmission
MDedge ObGyn
Act fast when confronted by a coagulopathy postpartum
MDedge ObGyn
Does the timing of umbilical cord clamping at delivery affect an infant’s long-term iron status?
MDedge ObGyn
10 practical, evidence-based recommendations for improving maternal outcomes of cesarean delivery
MDedge ObGyn
Does vaginal progesterone reduce preterm delivery among asymptomatic women who have a short cervix in the midtrimester?
MDedge ObGyn
Stop performing median episiotomy!
MDedge ObGyn
The fine points of delayed cord clamping
MDedge ObGyn