Group B Strep???

by Corrie Donahue
(Plainville, MA)

As if pregnant women don't have enough to worry about during pregnancy... what about Group B Strep??? I tested positive during my second trimester through a urine test and received antibiotics (Clindamycin) which made me very sick while taking them.





Everything seems fine now but I will be tested again between 35 and 37 weeks. I have been eating very healthy and have increased my probiotic as well as fermented food intake.

I'm worried about having to receive IV antibiotics or penicillin during labor due to research I've done regarding antibiotic resistance due to large numbers of women receiving antibiotics or penicillin at during birth... also additional problems with allergic disease in infants.

What are your thoughts on this?? I appreciate any information that you have to offer!

Sincerely,
Corrie A. Donahue

Answer:

Hi Corrie,

I'm sorry you had such a rough time with the antibiotics after testing positive for Group B Strep. I haven't heard many women who have been tested for it earlier in pregnancy than around 36 weeks.

There's a lot of controversy about Group B Strep because it's pretty natural to have it culture out in the female body. In fact, you can test positive for it at one point during pregnancy and be negative by the end of pregnancy.

There's also controversy about just how much good the continuous antibiotics actually do during labor.

Many midwives and moms take steps to naturally reduce the chance of culturing positive, just like you are talking about with taking probiotics and eating fermented foods.

Switch to cotton panties only (and make sure you change frequently, especially if they're getting damp which tends to happen during pregnancy with increased fluids).

Frequent Vitamin C is recommended, and Echinacea tea is a good idea. I think adding Nettle to the tea would also be helpful because it gently aids the body in cleansing and is very nourshing.


Keep up with the probiotics and fermented foods.

Watch your carbohydrate intake, and eat all carbs (breads, potatoes, etc.) with plenty of fats to help your body break them down and use them efficiently without getting a huge sugar rush for bacteria to feed on.

Dr. Natasha Campbell-McBride is an expert on gut health and gut flora, and she recommends this protocol for all women preparing to birth:

In the last month or so leading up to birth, apply yogurt (sugar free, plain yogurt, preferably homemade, otherwise a high quality store bought like Seven Stars) gently to the vagina and labia. The nipples and armpits are also a good idea. Do this after showering and allow the yogurt to dry then get dressed in natural fibers. You can also use kefir for this.

In addition to your oral probiotics, put a probiotic capsule directly into the vagina one night a week. A high strength formula like Biokult is recommended.

These measures help populate your vagina with good bacteria which prevents bacteria like Group B. Strep and also gives lots of good bacteria for your baby's gut as he or she comes through the birth canal. Using the yogurt or kefir on the breasts and armpits helps keep flora in good balance and prevent mastitis.

If you feel comfortable with these measures, they're generally very effective.

Mothering Magazine also has a good article on Group B Strep you may want to read.

Best of luck to you throughout the rest of your pregnancy and with your birth Corrie!

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Group B Strep???

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May 19, 2010
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Group B Strep experience
by: Anonymous

Hi, I was positive for Group B Strep in my first pregnancy. I adjusted my diet and took probiotics as well and considered refusing the antibiotics, but at my hospital, if I didn't get the antibiotics during labour, they would insist on keeping my baby for observation and he wouldn't have been allowed to room in with me. Faced with that choice, I went with the antibiotics. They didn't seem to have any effect on me during labour and I was careful to continue my special diet and probiotics as soon as the baby was born. He is two and a half now and has been a very healthy, happy baby so far. He did have a couple of weeks of colic, but we cut some proteins out of my diet and that seemed to do the trick for that. So far, no problems with infections or allergies - though they run in my family.

I don't have any advice for you. It is a very difficult decision, depending on what choices are avaialable where you live. If I had had the choice, I think I would have taken the chance and gone without the antibiotics, but that isn't something I could do. I am pregnant again and about to get that swab again. I'm going to try the probiotics and yogurt in advance this time and see how I make out!

Good Luck!

May 20, 2010
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Me too!
by: Anonymous

I tested positive for Group B strep with both of my children. For the first one, I was made to keep an IV of antibiotics through the entire 18 hour labor, which made it very hard to move around. With the second, I received the IV antibiotics in about 20 minutes early in my labor, and then was free to move as I wished! I did not notice any effect on the labor or baby either time, though allergies do not run in my family.

The choice at most hospitals is to either receive antibiotic treatment or plan for them to keep an extra close medical eye on the baby (which I did not want). My midwife also suggested that a pediatrician would want to treat the baby if I did not take antibiotics during labor.

Do I think we would be fine without it? Yes. But is it worth the extra medical attention to forgo it? Not to me.

Sep 23, 2010
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About that mothering article
by: Erin

Normally I love mothering magazine. But that article you linked has a MAJOR flaw. I wish I could comment on the actual article, but there is no place for that that I can find. So here it is: She's comparing the death rate of babies who die from Group B and mothers who get anaphylaxis from the antibiotic, which is 1/10,000. She assumes that all of them die. She says if they're not treated. If they are in the hospital, they will be treated, and the risk then of dying is 1/10, so 1/100,000 dying from that.

I can see the whole e-coli thing and everything, but I wonder why she put this massive flaw in there. It makes me wonder if it is just a biased article that she's trying to make the numbers look the way she wants them. She obviously did it on purpose, as she said a mother untreated with anaphylaxis - not even considering she would be treated.

I'm so confused what to think about this group b strep thing. I would love, LOVE to have a home birth. I've been seeing a HB midwife, but I was group b + in my last preg, and am worried I will be again. My brother got group b as a newborn. That was before they routinely treated it. He's fine now, but it is so, so scary.

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