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Query: UMLS:C0002453 (
amenorrhea
)
6,245
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
During a recent outbreak of Rhodesian sleeping sickness in the Lambwe Valley no asymptomatic Rhodesian sleeping sickness patients were found although 54% of the primary patients had mild symptoms and 9% were stuporous or comatose at presentation. The duration of symptoms was three months or less in 90% of the patients. Headache, weakness, joint and back pains and weight loss were claimed by at least 75% of the patients, while 82% of the females reported
amenorrhoea
and 70% of the males claimed impotency. Physical examination revealed lymphadenopathy in 86% but fever in only 36% of the patients, while chancres were found in only 16%. Patients had significantly lower levels of haemoglobin and thrombocytes than controls and their erythrocyte sedimentation rates were elevated. A comparison of both blood group and haemoglobin type between patients and controls yielded no significant differences. Fifty-seven per cent of the primary patients reporting mild symptoms had abnormal levels of leucocytes in their CSF. All relapse patients had abnormal CSF parameters. Levels of serum urea nitrogen were significantly elevated in patients, but SGOT, SGPT and total bilirubin were not. Levels of albumin and beta-globulin in patients were significantly lower than controls while gamma-globulin was elevated. Mean serum IgM levels in patients were elevated to nearly three-fold those of controls, but 35% of the individual patient values fell within the 95% range of control values. Some patients had extended
prothrombin
and thrombin times while fibrinogen levels were significantly elevated. No patients reported haemorrhage, and none was seen.
...
PMID:Presenting features of Rhodesian sleeping sickness patients in the Lambwe Valley, Kenya. 261 98
The prospective evaluation of the effect of thromboprophylaxis in women with one unexplained pregnancy loss from the 10th week of
amenorrhea
was performed. A total of 160 patients with heterozygous factor V Leiden mutation,
prothrombin
G20210A mutation, or protein S deficiency were given 5 mg folic acid daily before conception, to be continued during pregnancy, and low-dose aspirin 100 mg daily or low-molecular-weight heparin enoxaparin 40 mg was taken from the 8th week. Twenty-three of the 80 patients treated with low-dose aspirin and 69 of the 80 patients treated with enoxaparin had a healthy live birth (odds ratio [OR], 15.5; 95% confidence interval [CI], 7-34, P <.0001). Enoxaparin was superior to low-dose aspirin in each subgroup defined according to the underlying constitutional thrombophilic disorder. An associated protein Z deficiency and/or positive antiprotein Z antibodies were associated with poorer outcomes. The neonate weight was higher in the women successfully treated with enoxaparin, and neonates small for gestational age were more frequent in patients treated with low-dose aspirin. No significant side effects of the treatments could be evidenced in patients or newborns. As there is no argument to prove that low-dose aspirin may have been deleterious, these results support enoxaparin use during such at-risk pregnancies.
...
PMID:Low-molecular-weight heparin versus low-dose aspirin in women with one fetal loss and a constitutional thrombophilic disorder. 1552 40
This open, prospective, noncomparative study evaluated clinical and metabolic aspects of the use of a contraceptive combination of ethinyl estradiol (30 microg) and gestodene (75 microg) continuously for 24 weeks in 45 women aged 25 +/- 3.7 years. No alterations in weight or blood pressure were observed. Few side effects were recorded.
Amenorrhea
rates increased from the fourth month of observation onwards, reaching 81.2% by week 24. A reduction in the levels of cholesterol and LDL and an increase in HDL and triglycerides were observed. Insulin levels increased but not significantly, while levels of glycemia remained unchanged. Levels of antithrombin III, fibrinogen and plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) increased, whereas a reduction was observed in proteins C and S and in
prothrombin
time (PT). Activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT) remained unchanged. The treatment was associated with satisfactory clinical effects, high rates of
amenorrhea
after the third treatment cycle, and resulted in metabolic changes similar to those encountered during the classic use of contraceptive pills with monthly interruption for withdrawal bleeding.
...
PMID:Clinical and metabolic aspects of the continuous use of a contraceptive association of ethinyl estradiol (30 microg) and gestodene (75 microg). 1550 74
We report the medical management of a 32-year-old primigravida, after she was found to have a combined factor V (FV) and factor VIII (FVIII) deficiency during pregnancy. A routine coagulation profile performed during the 6th month of pregnancy showed a prolonged activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT) of 78 seconds, giving a patient/control ratio of 2.29, combined with a
prothrombin
time (PT) of 28 seconds. An investigation of the coagulation factors showed a combined FV and FVIII deficiency of 29% and 21% respectively. The bleeding risk was considered to be high. A multidisciplinary approach permitted a specific and individualized FVIII substitution protocol. At 39 weeks of
amenorrhea
, the patient was admitted to the labor room. An infusion of 2000IU of FVIII was implemented over 5 minutes; soon thereafter, PT was 17 seconds, aPTT patient/control ratio had decreased to 1.9 and FV and FVIII reached 38% and 36% respectively. Six hours later, the patient delivered an infant weighing 2850g who had an Apgar score of 10. No bleeding was detected. The patient was then closely monitored for 2 hours in the recovery room. Twelve hours after administration of the first dose of FVIII, another infusion of 2000IU of FVIII was administered. This substitution treatment was continued every 12 hours in ever-decreasing doses, allowing maintenance of FVIII level >50% for 5days. At D7 post-partum, the patient was discharged uneventfully.
...
PMID:Combined factor V and VIII deficiency and pregnancy--need for an early protocol-based multidisciplinary management. 2416 Dec 89