Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:1.16.3.1 (ceruloplasmin)
5,074 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The performance of a new low-dose oral contraceptive (Mercilon) containing only 20 micrograms ethinyloestradiol combined with 150 micrograms desogestrel is reviewed. Eight multicentre clinical trials have been completed and provide information on 10,672 women studied over 73,477 cycles. The high efficacy of Mercilon was indicated by the finding that only 10 pregnancies were reported; nine of these occurred in women who omitted to take Mercilon on a number of days and only one in a woman who took all the tablets according to instructions. Cycle control was good; as with all oral contraceptives, the incidence of breakthrough bleeding and spotting was highest in the first treatment cycle and by the sixth treatment cycle the values were usually < 5% and < 7%. More than 80% of women had regular cycles. Side effects were few, the most common being headache, nausea and breast tenderness with incidences in the sixth treatment cycle of less than 2%, 6% and 6%, respectively. There were no significant changes in body weight or blood pressure. Pharmacodynamic investigations showed no adverse effects. Only 1 of 5 studies found an increased response to a glucose tolerance test compared to the pretreatment test. In 8 of 10 studies, serum HDL-C concentrations increased on treatment and this was associated with increases in apoproteins A1 and A2. Serum triglyceride levels also increased but no change occurred in serum cholesterol or LDL-C levels. Haematological factors were assessed in 8 studies and only minor changes were observed. Serum binding protein (SHBG, CBG, caeruloplasmin) concentrations increased and serum androgen levels decreased. Measurements of blood FSH, LH, oestradiol and progesterone indicated adequate inhibition of ovulation. Mercilon is the only oral contraceptive containing 20 micrograms ethinyloestradiol to have high efficacy, to have no adverse pharmacodynamic effects and, importantly, to produce an acceptable bleeding pattern not significantly different from that of oral contraceptives with a higher content of ethinyloestradiol.
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PMID:Clinical experience and pharmacological effects of an oral contraceptive containing 20 micrograms oestrogen. 145 94

The metabolic effect of the monthly injectable contraceptive containing dihydroxyprogesterone acetophenide (DHPA) 150 mg + estradiol enanthate (EEn) 10 mg was compared to that of other regularly used contraceptive methods (pills containing: ethinylestradiol (EE) 0.050 mg + levonorgestrel (LNG) 0.250 mg, EE 0.030 mg + LNG 0.150 mg; EE 0.030/0.040/0.030 mg + LNG 0.050/0.075/0.0125 mg; norethisterone enanthate (NEE) 200 mg i.m.; non-hormonal methods). Serum triglycerides, HDL/LDL-cholesterol, copper, ceruloplasmin, total and free cortisol, CBG, total and free testosterone and SHBG in chronic users were determined. A total of 237 women took part in this study. Taking users of non-hormonal methods as control, triglyceride levels were higher, and total and free testosterone levels were lower in women using DHPA 150 mg + EEn 10 mg and in those taking contraceptive pills (p less than 0.05 - 0.01). Such modifications were slightly less in the group using the injectable. The effects of DHPA 150 mg + EEn 10 mg on HDL/LDL-cholesterol copper, ceruloplasmin, CBG, total and free cortisol and SHBG were rare or non-existent. Nevertheless, the contraceptive pills (even the low-dose formulations) correlate with modifications of all those variables, which were highly significant in comparison with the injectable (p less than 0.01) and with non-hormonal methods (p less than 0.01); there were no differences between the last two methods. The results suggest that the metabolic effect of DHPA 150 mg + EEn 10 mg is not higher than that of the commonly used oral contraceptives. On the other hand, they do not suggest that the dose contained in this injectable is exaggerated. There is no evidence that it produces accumulation of effects in the organism. These findings should be taken into account when referring to the long-term safety of this injectable.
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PMID:Multicentred clinical study of the metabolic effect of the monthly injectable contraceptive containing dihydroxyprogesterone acetophenide 150 mg + estradiol enanthate 10 mg. 211 15

The factors capable of modifying the activity of a given drug may be divided into two categories: those related to the patient (age, sex, weight, state of health, genetic factors, etc.) and those related to the drug (pharmaceutical formulation, dose, dose frequency, interaction with other drugs taken more or less simultaneously and administration mode). One example of a drug whose action varies according to the mode of administration adopted is offered by the estrogens which may be given orally (estradiol valerianate, estriol, conjugated estrogens, etc.) or parenterally (estradiol valerianate intramuscularly; conjugated estrogens and estriol vaginally, estradiol as a skin gel, by subcutaneous implant or transdermally). Blood concentrations of estradiol and estrogen after the same dose vary considerably according to the administration mode adopted so that doses may have to be adjusted in order to achieve the same levels of the circulating hormone. Having no first pass effect on the liver, parenteral administrations have less influence than oral ones on the synthesis of certain proteins by the liver (increased SHBG, CBG, TBG, transferrin, ceruloplasmin, angiotensinogen, clotting factors VII, IX, X and X complex; decreased antithrombin III and anti Xa) and on lipid metabolism (increased biliary cholesterol, triglycerides and HDL, especially HDL2; reduced LDL). In particular, it has been found that estradiol (differently from other estrogens) when administered transdermically is able to relieve menopausal symptoms at doses which do not influence the liver synthesis of proteins.
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PMID:[Action of drugs in relation to the administration route]. 254 94

In an open-label, randomized, cross-over study in 20 subjects, the short-term effects were investigated of Gracial (DSG/EE 7 x 25/40 micrograms/day + 15 x 125/30 micrograms/day) and Trigynon (LNG/EE 6 x 50/30 micrograms/day + 5 x 75/40 micrograms/day + 10 x 125/30 micrograms/day) on plasma concentrations of 17 beta-estradiol and progesterone as well as on carrier proteins (SHBG, CBG, ceruloplasmin), AT-III, carbohydrate metabolism (insulin, glucose, glycosylated proteins) and lipid metabolism (total cholesterol, triglycerides, phospholipids, HDL-C, LDL-C, HDL2-C, HDL3-C, HDL2-C/HDL3-C ratio, Apo A1, Apo B, Apo A1/Apo B ratio). Both preparations adequately and similarly inhibited ovulation in all subjects. Serum levels of carrier proteins were significantly higher with DSG/EE than with LNG/EE, whereas no between-group differences were observed with respect to fasting glucose and insulin, glycosylated proteins (mainly glycosylated albumin) and AT-III activity. DSG/EE showed significantly higher plasma levels than LNG/EE of estrogen-dependent lipid parameters such as triglycerides, HDL-C, HDL2-C, Apo A1, HDL2-C/HDL3-C ratio and Apo A1/Apo B ratio, whereas the levels of LDL-C and Apo B were significantly lower. Both oral contraceptive preparations were equally effective in suppression of follicular development, but combiphasic DSG/EE induced higher plasma levels of carrier proteins and higher plasma levels of potentially anti-atherogenic lipid parameters than did triphasic LNG/EE.
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PMID:A randomized cross-over study comparing pharmacodynamic and metabolic variables of a new combiphasic and a well-established triphasic oral contraceptive. 967 89