Dr. Michael E. Doyle: Conventional and Alternative Medicine

It’s A Boy!

Posted in Michael E. Doyle, MD, Pregnancy by Dr. Michael E. Doyle on July 1, 2011

It’s a Boy!

We just had a new baby. On June 14th, my wife gave birth to a 7 lb 4 oz baby boy by C-section due to “breech presentation” (he was right-side up instead of the usual head first position). We’ve named him William Edward, after my father.

He’s been in and out of the hospital due to jaundice. He was put under the “Bili lights’ and received a new (to me at least) IV immunoglobulin treatment. Fortunately, he’s doing well and his mom is well, too. He’s still a little yellow, but it appears to be a benign condition called “breast milk jaundice”.

Many thanks to Drs. Cahill, Gennaro and Grafani (the OB’s) and Dr. Lasky and her partners at the Pediatric Center. More to come…

Light Drinking in Pregnancy

Posted in Michael E. Doyle, MD, Pregnancy by Dr. Michael E. Doyle on January 25, 2011

Children born to mothers who drank up to 1–2 drinks per week or per occasion during pregnancy were not at increased risk of clinically relevant behavioural difficulties or cognitive deficits compared with children of abstinent mothers. Heavy drinking during pregnancy appears to be associated with behavioural problems and cognitive deficits in offspring at age 3 years whereas light drinking does not ~~ (Kelly,et.al. 2008, Light Drinking In Pregnancy)

A new study sheds some light on an interesting topic. In recent years, nearly all physicians have recommended that their patients completely abstain from drinking alcohol while they are pregnant. Heavy drinking during pregnancy has been clearly linked to a very serious problem called “fetal alcohol syndrome.” Babies affected by this suffer from decreased mental function as well as a variety of physical defects. In those studies these negative effects seem to occur only at high levels of alcohol  consumption– such as greater than two standard size drinks per day.

On the other hand, in many parts of the world alcohol consumption has been a normal part of daily life for many generations. It seems that women in these societies have often consumed small amounts of alcohol when pregnant without causing obvious harm to their children. Interestingly, this study showed that women who drank small amounts of alcohol– less than two drinks per week– may have had healthier babies. Over the years, these children showed better behavioral and mental scores and babies whose mothers did not drink at all during pregnancy.

When I took a look at the scientific literature, I noticed that many studies have had similar findings. Unfortunately, none of these studies are perfect, so we have not proven that drinking during pregnancy is perfectly safe. But I am becoming more and more confident that small amounts of alcohol are probably safe for most pregnant women if they so choose.

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