IBD and Pregnancy: Planning With Your Gastroenterologist
Content note: Reviewed for patient education accuracy against publicly available guidance from the Crohn's & Colitis Foundation and major IBD education sources. Last reviewed June 2026. Not individual medical advice.
Educational use only. IBDPal does not provide medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult your gastroenterologist or IBD care team for personal decisions.
Many people with Crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis have healthy pregnancies, but planning matters. Searchers often ask whether IBD affects fertility, which medications are safe, and how to time conception around remission.
Start With a Preconception Visit
Meet your gastroenterologist and, when recommended, obstetrics or maternal-fetal medicine before trying to conceive. Bring a medication list, recent labs, and flare history. Active inflammation can affect nutrition and pregnancy outcomes, so teams often aim for stable disease first.
Medications and Shared Decision-Making
Stopping IBD medication without guidance is a common mistake that can trigger flares. Many biologics and other therapies are continued in pregnancy under specialist oversight. Never change doses on your own.
Nutrition and Supplements
Folate, iron, vitamin D, and protein needs may rise. An IBD dietitian can help you meet goals if appetite is low. Log meals and symptoms in IBDPal to spot patterns to discuss at visits.
Flares During Pregnancy
Call your clinic promptly for worsening pain, bleeding, fever, or dehydration. Emergency care is appropriate for severe symptoms. Your team balances maternal and fetal safety.
After Delivery
Breastfeeding questions, postpartum flares, and sleep loss are common topics. Schedule GI follow-up early in the postpartum period if symptoms shift.
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