<P>When pregnant, I discontinued my anti-depressant, sleep med, and Prilosec. I took a substitute for Prilosec through the first two trimesters and then restarted Prilosec in the third on the advice of my docs. When breastfeeding I was able to take all the regular maintenance meds I needed. I opted not to take Cipro as an antibiotic because of the side-effects it has on joints and the concern of that passing through my milk. On my Specific Concerns of Breastfeeding page (<A href="http://www.geocities.com/MurrensNatureMama/specific_concerns_of_breastfeeding">www.geocities.com/MurrensNatureMama/specific_concerns_of_breastfeeding</A>) there is a link to check out the safety of medications during pregnancy or breastfeeding. There are more links from there to find if there are any more current recomendations and details about the safety (whether it is related to dose or method of delivery or stage in development) of particular medications. First, go ahead and try the yeast rememdies and see if they work. The thrush I get in my mouth does not look like typical thrush. The home remedies work quite quickly, you should see significant improvement within 2 days if it is yeast and you are using the remdies liberally enough.Second, When I was nursing, only antibiotics were of concern, but depending on the meds you are/were on this may not be the case. There are options for donated milk. Many milk banks require certain diagnoses or a prescription from a doctor in order to provide you with donor breast milk. Because it can affect the health of a baby with CF so dramatically, most doctors are willing to write that prescription for you (if it is needed). The other option is to search for alternative drugs to treat your condition(s). Sometimes there are natural (alternative) remedies or therapies that work just as well or better and with fewer side-effects. Other times there are older medications that work differently, yet provide the same results. You also want to weigh the gravity or severity of the risk of exposure to a drug with the vast and numerous benefits of breastfeeding. I could have put my daughter on a bottle those times that I needed antibiotics, because they did cause yeast-imbalances in her as well as myself. But, for me, knowing that this was the extent of the risk to her of that particular medication, I believed it was worth it for the maximum benefits of continuing to nurse. You can read some of the reasons I chose to continue nursing through antibiotics (even though I could have temporarily weaned her and resumed nursing after I was done taking antibiotics - this would have been our choice if I had had to have a med that was strongly contraindicated) on <A href="http://www.geocities.com/MurrensNatureMama/nursing_victory">www.geocities.com/MurrensNatureMama/nursing_victory</A>. It takes a lot of time and energy to be a truly informed consumer - even as studious as I am, I can look back and identify times when I was not well-informed - but it is infinitely worth it for the benefits to your and your baby's health!</P>