Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0002453 (amenorrhea)
6,245 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Our review of the incidence of ectopic pregnancy in metropolitan Oklahoma City hospitals from 1960 through 1975 revealed an overall statistically significant increase. Review of the incidence of gonorrhea during the same period for the State of Oklahoma also showed a statistically significant increase. There was a significant correlation between the incidence of ectopic pregnancy and the incidence of gonorrhea. The 160 cases of ectopic pregnancy from University Hospital reviewed in detail included all ectopic pregnancies admitted from 1960 to 1975. Findings revealed 56% were white women with an average age of 26.8 years and average parity of 2.49. Pain (97.5%), amenorrhea (83%), and abnormal uterine bleeding (68%) were the most common presenting complaints, while abdominal tenderness (85%) and pelvic mass (54%) were the common physical findings. Culdocentesis was positive in 78% of the patients. Thirty-nine percent had a history of pelvic inflammatory disease and 8% a previous ectopic pregnancy. Admission diagnosis was correct in 67%. Unilateral adnexal procedure was the treatment in 81%. Fifty-seven percent of the ectopic pregnancies were right-sided, and hemoperitoneum averaged 950 ml. Postoperative complication rate was 55%. Follow-up pregnancy rate was 50%, and future ectopic pregnancies occurred in 6% of these.
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PMID:Ectopic pregnancy: a 15-year review of 160 cases. 66 16

Most adolescent gynecological problems are related to sexual activity or the development or failure of hypothalamic-pituitary-ovarian-uterine activity. The 1st years of menstruation are usually anovulatory resulting in variable periods of amenorrhea which corrects itself in time. In profuse menstrual loss, endocrine, metabolic, and hemorrhagic disorders must be exlcuded before treatment with progesterone for endometrial hyperplasia. Primary amenorrhea requires detailed examination before diagnosis. Secondary amenorrhea is commonly caused by a disturbance of the hypothalamic-pituitary-ovarian axis due to an emotional disturbance. If pregnancy is eliminated, examination and reassurance are sufficient treatment. Most dysmenorrhea may be treated with mild analgesics and reassurance; in severe cases ovulation may be inhibited by estrogen treatment. Dilation of the cervix should never be attempted. In complaints of vaginal discharge, examination should be made for trichomonas, monilia, gonorrhea, or a forgotten tampon. Requests for contraception should be taken seriously regardless of age. The combined contraceptive pill or Gravigard or copper 7 IUD is the method of choice. Lower abdominal pain caused by pelvic inflammatory disease should be treated early to prevent tubal occlusion after salpingitis. Evidence of higher cervical cancer incidence among women who were sexually active in adolescence suggests routine cervical cytology should be performed. Treatment of adolescents should dispel ignorance and embarrassment with patience and skill.
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PMID:Aspects of student health. Adolescent gynaecology. 83 29

Between June 1987 and August 1989, physicians enrolled 323 tuberculosis (TB) patients and 116 health employees at the Arua Regional Hospital in a rural district of northern Uganda in a case control study. They wanted to look at the link between TB and HIV infection. TB patients were more likely to be HIV seropositive than the employees (18.3% vs. 7.7%; p .005). HIV seropositive individuals tended to be men (71.2% vs. 54.9% for controls; p .05) whose mean age was 27.69 years. Most HIV/TB patients lived in the town of Arua (50% vs. 7% in rural areas peripheral to Arua and 1.6% in a rural area near the district border; p .0001). HIV seropositive TB patients were more likely to have a sexually transmitted disease (STD) than HIV seronegative TB patients (47.4% vs. 12.5%; odds ratio [OR] = 6.32; p .0001), especially gonorrhea (p .0001). They also tended to have had more than 5 sexual partners in the past 2 years (mean number of partners among HIV seropositive TB patients = 10.6; 35.6% vs. 9.5%; OR = 9.24; p .0001). HIV seropositive TB patients were more likely to have participated in prostitution and to have had a blood transfusion than HIV seronegative TB patients (33.9% vs. 3.8%; OR = 13.03; p .001 and 6.8% vs. 1.1% OR = 6.33; p .05). Skin piercing, widely practiced in rural areas, appeared to have a protective effect against HIV infection (OR = .33; p .0005). HIV seropositive TB patients were significantly more likely to have a persistent cough of more than 4 months duration (p .001), fever lasting for more than 1 month (p .05), oral thrush (p .0001), lymphadenopathy (p .0005), and amenorrhea (fertile women only, p .005). 27 or 28 TB patients had AIDS. At the time of submission of this study for publication, 18 HIV seropositive TB patients died during treatment. The case fatality rate was indeed higher among HIV seropositive TB patients than among HIV seronegative TB patients (30.5% vs. 8.7%; p .0001). The TB-AIDS survival rate was 46.4% at 6 months, 32.1% at 12 months, and 21.4% at 16 months. Median survival time was 5 months.
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PMID:Tuberculosis and HIV infection association in a rural district of northern Uganda: epidemiological and clinical considerations. 149 36

Subfecundity is caused by disease and nutrition as well as by genetic, environmental, and psychological components. Sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) are caused by 21 different pathogens of which syphilis, gonorrhea, and chlamydia are the most important. Syphilis is caused by the bacterium Treponema pallidum with incidence of 10% in Thailand. 20% in Papua New Guinea, and 40% in Ethiopia. Stillbirths in infected mothers range from 66% to 80%. Gonorrhea is caused by the bacterium Neisseria gonorrhoea and its incidence was 18% in female patients in Ugandan clinic. 20% of women in Africa with cervical gonorrhea develop salpingitis. The risk of pelvic inflammatory disease is several times higher in IUD users. The bacterium Chlamydia trachomatis caused infertility in 15.4% of men in a 1991 study. Herpes simplex virus 2 infects 15-30% of sexually active adults, and the chance of fetal transmission is 40% when maternal lesions are present. Diseases other than STDs include tuberculosis (TB) whose development is aided by conditions such as malnutrition, malaria, leprosy, syphilis, and African sleeping sickness. Genital TB causes a 5-50% rate of menstrual disorders including amenorrhea and a 55-85% rate of sterility in women. Malaria is caused by Plasmodium protozoa, and the feverish state included by it can lead to oligospermia. Severe malarial anemia can lead to fetal and maternal mortality. The protozoa Trypanosoma causes African sleeping sickness that produces azoospermia and impairs the pituitary gland and ovaries. Schistosomiasis (bilharzia) and filariasis have less direct effect on fecundity but they negatively impact nutritional status. Maternal nutrition substantially impacts fetal and infant survival. During the Dutch famine of 1944-45 there was a 50% decrease in births 9 months subsequently. A 10-15% weight loss results in amenorrhea.
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PMID:Endemic disease, nutrition and fertility in developing countries. 163 64

The issue of this discussion is whether and to what extent treatment of infertility will contribute to a significant increase in fertility, and whether treatment of sexually transmitted diseases and infertility is justified as a humane effort to alleviate suffering, death, and the extent of impact on men, women, fetuses, and infants. The Brunham model produces estimates of the difference in the total fertility rate (TFR) due to sterility of between 9.7 and 18.0. However estimates with more realistic assumptions about life expectancy, menarche, menopause, and union formation yield TFR differences between 2.1 and 2.5. Accounting for secondary sterility and a more realistic simulation yields a change in the population growth rate of 0.8% and 0.9% compared to 2.5% and 1.9% in the Brunham model. The conclusion is that population growth rates would not be very likely to increase if sterility is eliminated. The Brunham model is an important attempt to model the effects of different assumptions about rates of partner exchange on disease prevalence and on sterility levels. The Brunham conclusion is that population growth rates increase by 50% or more when gonorrhea has a prevalence of 20% and a 12% probability of sterility per 6-month duration of illness. Chlamydia-related secondary sterility would not have quite as large an effect. Many other models are possible because of the many other fertility inhibiting factors. The Brunham model does not account for any age variation in fertility and mortality rates, which is not a realistic view of human behavior. The Brunham model also uses a very high mortality pattern, comparable to TFRs of 8.5 to 9.5 for a noncontracepting Hutterite natural fertility population, with short breast feeding, and universal marriage. When fecundability, exposure to risk of intercourse, postpartum and lactational amenorrhea, and coital frequency are taken into account, the impact of sterility is reduced. The proposed model accounts for sterility and postpartum amenorrhea, union formation, and coital frequency with realistic ages of menarche and menopause.
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PMID:The impact of eliminating sterility on population growth. 781 63

A set of new guidelines were formulated by an expert group meeting in Sweden organized by the pharmaceutical office during March 31-April 1, 1993. It contains various methods to avoid an undesired pregnancy and also advice about postcoital contraception. Among barrier methods, the condom is the only reversible method for men with a method failure of 2 and user failure of 10. It protects against gonorrhea, chlamydia, condyloma, herpes simplex, HIV, and hepatitis B. The diaphragm can be used with a spermicide and protects to a lesser degree against chlamydia, gonorrhea, and cervical cancer. The female condom is as effective as the condom. Among spermicides, nonoxynol-9 is not only effective against sperms but also against bacteria, viruses, and certain vaginal and cervical cells. The vaginal sponge is impregnated with nonoxynol-9 and is effective up to 24 hours. The copper IUD, with a method failure of less than 1, can cause profuse menstrual bleeding, dysmenorrhea, and endometritis-salpingitis. Hormonal methods include combination pills (2-phase and 3-phase pills) and gestagen methods (high dose with 150 mg of medroxyprogesterone acetate injection every 3 months and low-dose minipills with levonorgestrel, norethisterone, or lynestrol). Mechanisms of action concern combination pills, gestagen methods, minipills, Norplant, and Levonova. Drug cross reaction can reduce effectiveness. Side effects include bleeding and amenorrhea. Risk-benefit determination is based on health effects. Possible risks are associated with breast cancer, cervical cancer, blood pressure increase, venous thromboembolism, and heart infarction. Various phases of the reproductive age include young women, lactating women, and women in the later part of the reproductive age. Special groups include those who have experienced ectopic pregnancy, infections (candida, sexually transmitted diseases: chlamydia trachomatis, HIV infections), obesity, cardiovascular diseases, diabetes mellitus, tumors of the reproductive organs, liver diseases, migraine, epilepsy, surgery, and handicapped women. Postcoital contraception is used only in need, and methods for postcoital contraception include hormonal method and the copper IUD.
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PMID:[Contraception. Recommendations from a group of experts]. 790 65

Women over age 40 have high rates of unwanted pregnancy and abortion and limited choices of contraception. Oral contraceptives (OCs) with 20-35 mcg of estrogen can be recommended for these women as long as they do not smoke. Previously, some association was found between pill users aged over 35 years and an increased risk of myocardial infarction. Thus, OCs were not recommended for them. However, recent findings implicate smoking instead of age in the increased risk of myocardial infarction in OC users. OCs are useful in treating dysfunctional uterine bleeding of the perimenopause, in regulating menstrual cycles, and in preventing anemia. Other benefits include the reduction of endometrial and ovarian cancers, fibroids, endometriosis, benign breast diseases, ovarian cysts, ectopic pregnancy, and pelvic inflammatory disease. Monogamous and parous women with negative cervical cultures for gonorrhea and chlamydia can use IUDs. Sterilization is an option only after the completion of family size; tubal ligation, however, is associated with more morbidity and mortality than vasectomy. Thus, vasectomy should take precedence over tubal ligation. Depo-Provera injections every 3 months are safe, and they also help with dysfunctional bleeding and breakthrough bleeding via the production of amenorrhea. This drug is approved by the Food and Drug Administration and is popular worldwide. Long-term studies have not confirmed the increased risk of breast cancer with Depo-Provera use. Among implants, Norplant is almost as effective as tubal ligation, but it may cause dysfunctional bleeding in women over the age of 40. Mechanical methods also provide protection; however, they result in a pregnancy rate of 10-20% per year.
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PMID:Contraception in women older than 40 years of age. 836 31

Medicinal plants are widely being used by the traditional medical practitioners for curing various diseases in their day-to-day practice. Biophytum sensitivum DC (Oxalidaceae) is used as a traditional folk medicine in ailments such as inflammation, arthritis, wounds, tumors and burns, gonorrhea, stomach ache, asthma, cough, degenerative joint disease, urinary calculi, diabetes, snake bite, amenorrhea and dysmenorrhea. It is a small, flowering, annual herb with sensitive leaves. It grows throughout tropical Africa and Asia, especially in Philippines and the hotter parts of India and Nepal. Phytochemical studies have shown that the major pharmacologically active constituents are amentoflavone and a polysaccharide fraction, BP100 III. Recent pharmacological study shows that it has antioxidant, immunomodulatory, anticancer, anti-inflammatory, chemoprotective, antidiabetic and wound healing potential. This review attempts to describe the ethnobotany, pharmacognosy, traditional uses, chemical constituents, and various pharmacologic activities and other aspects of B. sensitivum.
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PMID:Ethnobotany, phytochemistry and pharmacology of Biophytum sensitivum DC. 2265 7