Anonymous wrote:Couple of thoughts:
If your morning sickness is leaving you non-functional, whatever side effects may come from the Zofran would be overshadowed by the extremely positive effects of actually getting good nutrition to your fetus at a critical time in its development (not to mention what it'll mean to your own mental health to actually be able to eat)
I think the reason why you see other women taking it throughout their pregnancy is because their severe nausea lasts that long, not because they are addicted to the drug. It doesn't have any addictive qualities. (But it can cause constipation, so that's something to watch for.)
Do what you need to do to be well.
This. I was on Zofran from week 7 until I delivered, though on a very low dose (4mg total, 2mg twice/day) from about week 20 on. As soon as I delivered, I felt better than I had since, well, week 7, and didn't have any trouble going off Zofran. You do need to taper it slowly if you're on it, can't just go cold turkey.
My seven month old daughter is quite healthy. True, there no controlled studies of the long-term effects of Zofran, but women have been using it for morning sickness for 10+ years. If there were something major, we would have seen it by now. Being unable to keep food down and depriving the baby of nutrition needed for development is nothing to sneeze at.
Hang in there. It sucks, but is totally worth it, or at least it was for me.