1. Safety issues of maternal drug therapy during breastfeeding.
- Author
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Berlin CM Jr, Paul IM, and Vesell ES
- Subjects
- Analgesics, Opioid adverse effects, Codeine adverse effects, Counseling, Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Opioid-Related Disorders genetics, Opioid-Related Disorders metabolism, Pharmacogenetics, Analgesics, Opioid metabolism, Breast Feeding adverse effects, Codeine metabolism, Milk, Human chemistry, Opioid-Related Disorders etiology
- Abstract
Two goals when counseling breastfeeding mothers taking medication are protecting the infant from adverse events and permitting necessary maternal therapy. Madadi et al. report a case-control study of neonatal and maternal opioid toxicity after codeine administration. Therapeutic considerations in counseling breastfeeding mothers include susceptibility to drug toxicity of the very young and/or premature infant, significant interindividual variations in drug response, the dose-response relationship with respect to drug toxicity, and the role of pharmacogenetics in both the mother and the infant. These host factors may combine in a particular patient to act synergistically to produce an adverse reaction.
- Published
- 2009
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