Thrombocytopenia and pregnancy

  It is true that thrombocytopenia in mothers can cause thrombocytopenia in newborns because platelet antibodies can pass through the placenta. In fact, only a minority of newborns born to mothers with thrombocytopenia develop thrombocytopenia.  Pregnancy (especially in the second trimester) can also aggravate the thrombocytopenia of the mother.  However, in the vast majority of cases, pregnancy and delivery are safe for mothers with thrombocytopenia.  If there is a significant decrease in platelets during pregnancy, treatment with gammaglobulin and low-dose hormones is usually not detrimental to the fetus.  There is information from abroad that suggests that mothers with thrombocytopenia should have a cesarean section during delivery, but it is inconclusive whether this reduces the risk to the mother and child compared to a natural delivery.  Description of the disease (onset, main symptoms, hospital visited, etc.): My beloved has always been in good health, only in the first pregnancy found a little low platelets, but did not care, then gave birth to a small baby, but the baby’s platelets can not rise, and finally died. In this case, can my beloved and I have a baby?