The bacteria may have come from the mother during birth or from another source. Other people that live with someone who has GBS bacteria, including other children, are not at risk of getting sick.
Group B Strep is not a sexually transmitted disease. Most women carrying GBS will have no symptoms. Carrying GBS is not harmful to you, but it can affect your baby around the time of birth. GBS can occasionally cause serious infection in young babies and, very rarely, during pregnancy before labour.
If you test positive for group B strep, it doesn't mean that you're ill or that your baby will be affected. It simply means you need treatment to prevent an infection in your baby. Talk with your health care provider about how you'll incorporate your group B strep treatment into your labor plan.
If you have a positive GBS test and you do not have any symptoms or complications, the treatment is intravenous (IV) antibiotics at the beginning of labor or the rupture of membranes (when your water breaks). If you are allergic to penicillin, your doctor will give you a different antibiotic instead.
Most babies who are treated for GBS do fine. But even with treatment, about 1 in 20 babies (5 percent) who have GBS die. Premature babies are more likely to die from GBS than full-term babies (born at 39 to 41 weeks of pregnancy). GBS infection may lead to health problems later in life.
Women are usually tested during their 36th week of pregnancy. This is done via swab to the vagina or rectum. If the woman tests positive it is standard practice that she receive IV antibiotics during labor to avoid the chances of passing the infection onto the baby.
GBS can cause serious infections in babies exposed during birth. You can be screened for GBS with a swab taken from your vagina and rectum at 36 to 37 weeks. If you test positive for GBS, you'll receive antibiotics while you're in labor to reduce your baby's risk of contracting a GBS infection.
Even though health care providers do not widely recognize GBS vaginitis, GBS can cause yellow or green discharge as well as vaginal burning and/or irritation. These symptoms may be mistaken for a yeast infection or bacterial vaginosis.
Toilet seats are a hotbed for bacteria and viruses; there is no question about it. According to Dr Ben Lam, resident physician at Raffles Medical Hong Kong, streptococcus and staphylococcus are two kinds of bacteria that can be found on toilet seats.
Most providers will recommend if you are GBS positive to come to the hospital immediately after your water breaks, because GBS risk to the baby will go up the longer your water is broken. They will want to start you on antibiotics right away.
There is no known cure for GBS. But treatments can help improve symptoms of GBS and shorten its duration. Given the autoimmune nature of the disease, its acute phase is typically treated with immunotherapy, such as plasma exchange to remove antibodies from the blood or intravenous immunoglobulin.
A strep B infection during pregnancy can also cause miscarriage or stillbirth, but this is rare. What are the risks of group B streptococcus (GBS) infection during pregnancy? Extremely rarely, GBS infections during pregnancy can also cause miscarriage, early (premature) labour or stillbirth.
According to CDC guidelines, a C-section should not be used to prevent early-onset GBS infection in infants. Also, if the C-section is planned and the mother is identified as having GBS, antibiotics need not be given unless labor has begun or the water breaks prior to the surgery.
Group B strep infection can lead to life-threatening complications in infants, including: Pneumonia. Inflammation of the membranes and fluid surrounding the brain and spinal cord (meningitis) Infection in the bloodstream (bacteremia)
If you've been exposed to the bacteria, you can be contagious a few days before symptoms start. If you're treated with antibiotics, you'll remain contagious until you've been on antibiotics for at least 24 hours. If you don't seek treatment, you'll remain contagious for 2 to 3 weeks after contracting the infection.
Some commonly touted GBS remedies: Apple Cider Vinegar — taken orally or as a vaginal rinse. Garlic — taken orally or as a vaginal suppository (Bonus: May also help repel vampires and random strangers who feel compelled/entitled to rub your pregnant belly.)