Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0002895 (sickle cell disease)
11,747 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Routine obstetric screening for all patients should include a Pap smear, urinalysis and urine culture, complete blood count, blood type, Rh factor and direct Coombs' test. Patients should also be screened for syphilis, rubella, gonorrhea and diabetes. For patients at high risk for certain conditions, additional studies of value include obstetric ultrasound, amniocentesis, serum alpha-fetoprotein level and screening for sickle cell anemia, herpes, hepatitis B, Chlamydia and human immunodeficiency virus.
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PMID:Prenatal screening. 328 2

This Bulletin examines the causes of subfecundity -- the diminished ability to reproduce -- and its effect today and in the past on the fertility, or actual reproductive performance, of individuals and, hence, populations. By definition, all real populations are subfecund since all experience some degree of involuntary biological factors affecting coitus, conception, or the ability to carry a conceptus to live birth which reduces their fecundity below the estimated biological population maximum of 15 children per woman. Affecting both men and women, these factors fall into 5 categories: genetic factors such as blood group incompatibilities and inherited sickle cell anemia or diabetes; psychopathology, including psychic stress and behavioral disorders (e.g., drug and alcohol abuse); infectious diseases such as gonorrhea, malaria, tuberculosis, and postabortion infection; malnutrrition, including the chronic undernutrition of the 3rd World and the overnutrition of developed societies; and hazards posed by increasing amounts of radiation and toxic chemicals in the environment. Reducing subfecundity requires improved living conditions, avoidance of or protection from known hazards, and adoption of medical advances which now can help 40 to 60% of subfecund couples. But even in the U.S. fertility would certainly rise among the 15% of couples now estimated to be involuntarily childless and the 10% who have fewer children than they want, and among disadvantaged groups, and teenagers.
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PMID:Frustrated fertility: a population paradox. 1233 56

Each year as a consequence of pregnancy and delivery at least 500,000 women die, 99% of them in developing countries. Most maternal deaths are avoidable. For each death, 10-15 other women suffer serious health effects which may lead to chronic pain or even social isolation. Childbirth is riskier for women who are too young or too old, who have many children, or whose births are too closely spaced. Limiting family size reduces both maternal and child deaths. In developed countries, 5-30 women die per 100,000 births, compared to 50-800 in developing countries. Maternal mortality rates at 2 hospitals in Yaounde, Cameroon, have declined significantly in recent years, probably due to establishment of high risk pregnancy clinics, improved monitoring during labor, and child spacing clinics. Improved obstetric services and child spacing could reduce maternal mortality in developing countries as they have in the developed world. The use of contraception has been a controversial topic in traditional African societies, but by now the majority of governments of developing countries include family planning programs in their development plans for their health as well as their economic benefits. Despite gradual increases, fewer than 5% of women in most African countries use modern contraception. African men play an insignificant role in family planning. The continuing practices of prolonged lactation and postpartum abstinence in rural areas have compensated to some extent for the absence of modern contraception. Oral contraceptives are the most widely used reversible method. They may protect against vaginal infection, iron deficiency anemia, ectopic pregnancy, benign breast disease, ovarian and endometrial cancer, dysmenorrhea, endometriosis, and rheumatoid arthritis. There is evidence that some steroid hormones have a beneficial effect in stabilizing the cellular membranes of red blood cells in women with sickle cell anemia. The danger of infection with the IUD is largely limited to the 1st 4 months of use and to women with sexually transmitted diseases. Careful selection of candidates, aseptic insertion, and regular follow-up are needed to ensure IUD safety. The IUD is contraindicated for nulliparas. Barrier methods provide contraception as well as some protection against sexually transmitted diseases. Condoms have a significant protective effect against HIV infection. Diaphragms, cervical caps, and vaginal sponges provide some protection against infections like gonorrhea and chlamydiae that invade the cervical cells. Many adolescents resist condoms because they diminish sensation. But condoms provide protection against sexually transmitted diseases and are appropriate for individuals with sporadic sex lives. Oral contraceptives are more effective but adolescents are at risk of forgetting pills. IUDs are the least attractive option for adolescents because of the danger of infection and subsequent infertility.
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PMID:[High risk pregnancies and family planning]. 1234 59