Can a person with hepatitis B get pregnant?

Whether hepatitis B patients can get pregnant is a lot of women with hepatitis B are very concerned about the problem, pregnancy can increase the burden on the liver, hepatitis B patients in the inflammation of the active period, liver function is not normal, it is best not to get pregnant, should pay attention to contraception. If you have ever suffered from hepatitis B, it is safer to get pregnant if your symptoms disappear after rest and treatment, and your liver function returns to normal and remains stable for at least half a year. If you get pregnant when hepatitis B is stabilized. In the seventh, eighth and ninth months of pregnancy, a monthly injection of high-value immunoglobulin can block intrauterine hepatitis B infection. After the delivery of a pregnant woman with hepatitis B, the newborn should be injected with hepatitis B vaccine and high-valent immunoglobulin within 4-8 hours after birth, and the infant should be injected with hepatitis B vaccine at the age of 1 month and 6 months, which can effectively block the vertical transmission from mother to child. Hepatitis B should not be pregnant in six cases: 1, the current symptoms of acute hepatitis B, accompanied by obvious liver function abnormalities, in the absence of stabilization of the condition before, it is best to suspend pregnancy; 2, hepatitis B virus infection for a long time and liver damage is serious, liver biopsy confirmed as cirrhosis, accompanied by obvious thrombocytopenia, splenic function hyperactivity, coagulation dysfunction; 3, chronic hepatitis B patients with liver function abnormalities are more obvious, and liver function fluctuations are often large, and often the patient’s liver function is more obvious, and the patient’s liver function is more obvious. 4, chronic hepatitis B patients with severe extra-hepatic systemic manifestations, such as nephropathy, aplastic anemia, etc.; 5, those who have a history of pregnancy but terminated the pregnancy due to liver intolerance; 6, hepatitis B virus-infected patients with obstetrics and gynecological disorders who should not be pregnant, such as those with a history of repeated cesarean section. Those who belong to one of the above six conditions must get pregnant under the guidance of specialized doctors to ensure the safety of mother and baby and to maximize the blockage of hepatitis B virus transmission to the next generation.