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Rhesus jab Topic: Rhesus jab

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offline Madzwalker
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Posted: 04 April 2008 at 10:02am | IP Logged Quote Madzwalker

Did you have the Rhesus Jab? I just saw this news article and thought it would be interesting to you all.

Foetal test rules out rhesus jab

A test for spotting a mismatch between the blood of a pregnant woman and her baby could prevent thousands from undergoing unnecessary treatment.

Around 100,000 pregnant women a year are found to be Rhesus (RhD) negative, which can be dangerous for the baby.

But scientists say an easy, rapid test to assess the baby's RhD status means more than a third of RhD negative women can avoid painful injections.

Trial results of the test are reported in the British Medical Journal.

Currently, all women who test RhD negative at routine antenatal checks are given one or two antiserum injections during the pregnancy.

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Where the baby is RhD positive, the injections prevent the mother making antibodies to the baby's blood, which can pass into the mother's blood at birth.

Without treatment there are usually no problems during a woman's first pregnancy, but if she goes on to have another RhD positive baby, such antibodies can cross the placenta and destroy the baby's red blood cells causing serious and sometimes fatal disease.

However, about 38% of RhD negative women are carrying an RhD negative baby, so they receive antiserum injections unnecessarily.

Accurate test

Researchers at the NHS Blood and Transplant Centre in Bristol assessed the new test for predicting the baby's blood group in almost 2,000 women.

DNA from the baby in blood was taken from the mother at or before the 28 week antenatal visit to test the baby's blood type.

In 96% of cases, the correct RhD status of the baby was predicted by the test, which the NHS researchers hope could be available more widely next year.

The findings are important because there have been concerns that the anti-serum injections, which are derived from blood products, could be a source of infections such as hepatitis C.

Study leader Geoff Daniels, head of molecular diagnostics at NHS Blood and Transplant in Bristol said they were carrying out further research to determine if the test could be done earlier in pregnancy.

"It's good practice not to give treatment to people who don't need it."

'Not perfect'

Dr Sailesh Kumar, consultant in foetal and maternal medicine at Queen Charlotte's and Chelsea Hospital in London said the test was already being used for select patients.

"This paper shows very nicely it's possible to apply this technique to much larger numbers and that you get reliable results and you can target women who are carrying RhD positive babies.

"It's fair to say women don't like any interventions unless they are absolutely necessary."

But Professor Andrew Shennan, an expert in Obstetrics at King's College London said the injections were not ideal and were expensive and inconvenient for the woman.

"It's not a perfect test and you get an occasional false negative, so the question is can you justify not treating all women."

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offline mum2willNkimi
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Posted: 04 April 2008 at 12:50pm | IP Logged Quote mum2willNkimi

This is excatly what happened to my dd, they failed to read my results properly with ds and he was not to bad, just alittle jaundace(sp?) but they failed to connect his illness to my results and they didn't give me the injections needed to stop this hapening again, so when i was pg with dd they missed it all again and with in 4 hours of being born a nurse noticed something was wrong and with in 8 hours she was in the intensive care for babies, we had to stay in for a week and go back every week for 6 weeks, after that for check ups to see if her blood was getting better and they thought at one point that dd would be re admitted for a blood transfusion as she was quite poorly still, we had to give medicine everyday for the first 6 weeks and then wait but thankfully all was well in the end, but after this being missed for a second time i would never have any more as it would almost certainally end in tragedy.
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offline mum of 4!
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Posted: 04 April 2008 at 2:56pm | IP Logged Quote mum of 4!

I am blood group A neg, and had with all 5 of my pregnancys 2 injections of Anti-D one at 28 and then 32 weeks, and then one after my babys being born.. but only my first boy was Rhesus negative.

I didnt mind having the injections, as they said they was important, but didnt really explain what exactly they were for.
So in my case the following 4 pregnancys carried the risk of my blood passing over to the baby and vice versa, but the first was unnecessary.
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offline bensmum
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Posted: 04 April 2008 at 3:51pm | IP Logged Quote bensmum

I'm rhesus neg, but never had any anti d injections! Don't know why. Ben was neg as well tohugh, coz dh is neg too. I'm sure I never had any injections, should I have? I'm worried now (don't know why, coz Ben's fine lol)
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