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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (depression)
172,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

On the basis of the studies of the embryogenesis of the vagina, the authors consider that malformations classically described as being partial aplasia should not be separated from the total absence of the vagina. The important feature is the association of a functioning or non functioning uterus with the absence of the vagina. They believe that it is incorrect to describe the pouch of menstrual retention associated with a functioning uterus as "haematocolpos" and that is not justified to describe the cup-shaped vestibular depression as "hemi-vagina". According to the authors, although vaginal aplasia with a functioning uterus forming a pouch of menstrual retention constitutes an absolute indication for surgery, surgery is not justified in cases of vaginal aplasia with a non functioning uterus. If Frank's method fails in these cases, the patient or the couple should be referred to a sexologist, as women with this anomaly retain a perfect femininity, although unable to conceive.
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PMID:[Morphogenesis of vaginal aplasia. Therapeutic deductions]. 405 73

The contractability of the Fallopian tubes is instrumental in the transport of the ovum to the uterus. Various studies have been done to determine the effect of different hormones on this property of the tubes, but they have been inconclusive. 34 patients who were scheduled for salpingectomies for reasons of birth control and who had been using steroid contraceptives for at least 3 months prior to the operation were selected for study. Half the sample had used pure progestagens (Depo-Provera or chlormadinone) and half had used a combined preparation (quinestrol + quingestanol or deladroxate). All were between 29-41 years of age with numbers of pregnancies ranging from 5 to 21. The intensity and frequency of the contractions and the general activity of the isthmus portion of the tubes were studied for 10-minute periods in 2 cm segments. Also, histological studies were done using hematoxylin eosin tincture and Van Giessen tincture, and histochemical tests were performed. The 17 cases on combined orals exhibited a significantly higher rate of activity than those on pure progestins, but were also subject to contractions of greater intensity. The histochemical studies showed a decrease in the energetic material and in the enzymatic activity related to carbohydrate metabolism in the tubes of the progestin group. The depression of motor activity and energetic metabolism was, however, neutralized by administering estrogens.
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PMID:[Effects of various steroids on the morphology and function of human fallopian tubes]. 419 46

The present status of oral contraceptive steroids and the IUD, the 2 most effective and increasingly popular contraceptive methods (used by 41.6% of all U.S. married couples practicing contraception in 1970), is presented. Oral steroid contraceptives with varying quantity and activity of estrogen (ethinyl estradiol or mestranol) and progestogen (norethindrone, norethynodrel, ethynodiol diacetate, or norgestrel), are of 3 types: combination, sequential, and minidose progestogen alone. The most effective contraceptive available is the combined oral pill with a pregnancy rate of less than .2 % per 100 women after 1 year. Contraceptive action is exerted primarily through inhibition of ovulation and secondarily by alterations in cervical mucus, endometrial glands, the ovary, and in the oviduct and uterine muscle. In comparison, sequential oral contraceptives are less effective with greater side effects, and should only be used in women with amenorrhea. Effects of oral contraceptives other than contraception include those on the (1) the primary targets of the female reproductive system, (2) on other endocrine oragans and (3) on the remainder of the body. In the first group, changes may include transitory stromal fibrosis in the ovary, enlarged fibromyomata, intermenstrual bleeding or amenorrhea, increased amount of cervical mucus, polypoid hyperplasia of the endocervical glands, breast tenderness, and changes in lactation. Changes in the second category which may occur affect the adrenal glands, hypothalamus, the thyroid (increased thyroid-binding globulin), and pancreas (alterations in glucose metabolism). Effects on the rest of the body may include increase in serum lipids and changed atherogenic index, abnormalities in liver function, thromboembolism (incidence in oral contraceptive users 4.4 times that in non-users), melasma, alterations in the central nervous system with increased incidence of cerebral vascular accidents, hypertension, and increased body weight. Absolute contraindications to oral contraceptive therapy include cancer of the breast and uterus, pregnancy, active liver disease, hyperlipidemia, and history of gestational diabetes, thromboembolic phenomena or coronary artery disease. Relative contraindications include depression, migraine, myomata of the uterus, hypertension, epilipsy, oligomenorrhea and amenorrhea. Reliable epidemiologic data on IUDs from the Cooperative Statistical Program indicated first year pregnancy rate of 2.5%. Problems with the IUD include: 1) pregnancy with device in situ, which is associated with a higher incidence of spontaneous abortion; 2) ectopic pregnancy, which is prevented at a rate of only 90% compared with intrauterine pregnancies prevented in 97-98%; and 3) expulsions (20% of which are unnoticed), the expulsion rate being higher with decreasing age and parity, higher in the first than second year of use, and higher with smaller than larger devices. A major problem is discontinuation for medical reasons (15% rate in the first year), mainly bleeding and pain. Perforation, another serious complication, occurs initially at time of insertion with an incidence of 1 per 2500 insertions for the loop. IUDs were found to produce a sterile inflammatory tissue reaction, which is postulated as the primary causative factor for their contraceptive effect in humans.
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PMID:Current status of contraceptive steroids and the intrauterine device. 459 80

A pantropic, attenuated RNA virus [TC83 strain of Venezuelan encephalitis (VE) virus] grew in hamster testes after intratesticular inoculation. Virus did not grow in testes after subcutaneous injection nor in uninoculated testes after unilateral testicular injection. Although viremia disappeared within 6 days when virus-neutralizing antibodies appeared in serum, viral growth in testes continued for 2-3 weeks after intratesticular inoculation. Virus also persisted for 12 days in testes of hamsters immunized 4 weeks previous to intratesticular inoculation. Thus, there seemed to be a barrier between germinal epithelium and blood to early virus-neutralizing antibodies which developed within 2-4 weeks of infection. Cytonecrosis, inflammation, depression in the number of germinal cells, atrophy, fibrosis and eventual sterility occurred with viral growth in testes of normal hamsters, but no histopathology other than atrophy and aspermia was seen in epididymides. Similar changes occurred in testes of some previously immunized hamsters. Virus antigen was found in diploid, but not haploid germinal cells, and virus (either attenuated or virulent VE) did not adsorb to or grow in sperm maintained in vitro. Males with infected testes and virus in the epididymis remained fertile for about 2 weeks after inoculation. Virus was only occasionally transferred to the uterus-vagina of normal females by copulation with males with infected testes, and only rarely did such females become infected. Usually, pregnancy developed and progressed normally, and no convincing transfer of virus to progeny occurred. In normal female hamsters inoculated intrauterinely or subcutaneously, virus did not reach higher concentrations in uteri than in blood, virus disappeared concurrently in both and no histopathology developed in uteri. However, infection of females by intrauterine inoculation of attenuated VE virus 2 hours before mating prevented pregnancy whereas intrauterine inoculation of saline or an adenovirus did not.
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PMID:An RNA viral infection of hamster testes and uteri resulting in orchitis and effects on fertility and reproduction. 494 61

The metallic ions, copper and zinc, are extensively associated with biological processes. An imbalance in the normal concentration of these metals can alter the reproductive function. The experiments reported here were done to determine whether the insertion of a metallic device into the uterus of rats is associated with metabolic changes in the endometrium. For this purpose the effect of IUDs on the incorporation of 2Na 35S40 into the mucoproteins and of thymidine 2-carbon-14 into the DNA of the endometrium of normal rats was studied. Estradiol benzoate, 20 mcg, was injected im the day before instillation with radioisotopes in order to have all the rats under similar estrogenic stimulation. In Experiment 1 either .2 mc of 2Na35S40 or 2.5 mcc of thymidine 2-carbon-14 in .1 ml of distilled water was instilled into each uterus. To avoid expulsion of the isotope a ligature was placed in the lower portion of each horn. The opposite horn served as a control. The horns were excised at different intervals from 1 to 88 hours later. The results showed that the accumulation of radioactivity in the endometrium reaches its maximum concentration in about 22 hours and then gradually declines. In Experiment 2 copper wire, zinc wire, or nylon thread was used as an IUD. The opposite horn was used as a control. About 14 days later the isotope was instilled as in Experiment 1 and left for 24 hours. In the presence of an inert foreign body, such as nylon thread, a significant decrease in the accumulation of sulfur-35 in the endometrium (18.5%; p less than .05) was noted. With zinc wire the assimulation decrese was 44.2% (p less than .001), and with copper wire, it was 69.6% (p less than .001). Absorption of thymidine 2-carbon-14 was the same in both horns in the control group. Nylon thread produced no significant difference. Copper and zinc produced statistically significant depressions of absorption (p less than .001). Copper depression was greater than zinc depression (p less than .01). The nylon thread is considered to be an inert foreign body while the copper and zinc wires are active.
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PMID:Effect of various types of intrauterine foreign bodies on the incorporation of 35S into mucoprotein and of thymidine 2-14C into DNA of rat's endometrium. 536 69

The influence of alloxan diabetes on reproductive function and the estradiol-stimulated increase in uterine peroxidase was investigated. Alloxan monohydrate in a dose of 75 mg/kg body weight effectively produced permanent diabetes. In adult rats, 20 days of diabetes resulted in cessation of the estrous cycle and a significant reduction in the gain of body weight, the weights of anterior pituitary gland, ovary, uterus, the level of serum progesterone and the activity of the estradiol-stimulated uterine peroxidase (P less than 0.05). After 10 days of insulin treatment, the ovarian weight, the estrous cycle and the level of ovarian hormones were restored to normal whereas the uterine weight and the estradiol-stimulated uterine peroxidase activity were only partially recovered. Persistent depression of the uterine response in the insulin-treated diabetic rats to both endogenous and exogenous ovarian hormone stimulation suggests that the uterus was directly affected by diabetes. The direct effect of diabetes upon the uterus was further demonstrated in the ovariectomized immature rat in which diabetes depressed the stimulatory action of estradiol on both uterine weight and uterine peroxidase activity.
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PMID:Depression of estrogen-induced uterine peroxidase in alloxan-diabetic rats. 609 85

The new H2-antagonist mifentidine (compound marked DA 4577) was tested for its inhibitory effect on the relaxation induced by histamine on the rat uterus and was compared with the well known H2-blocker ranitidine. Mifentidine was shown to be more effective than ranitidine (about 10 times). However whereas ranitidine behaved as a "classical" competitive antagonist, mifentidine at concentrations of 10(-7) M, caused a remarkable depression of the maximum response to histamine. This "unsurmountable" antagonism may connected with a tight binding of the compound to the receptor with a consequent low degree of dissociation. Ranitidine, but not mifentidine, at concentrations of 10(-5) M was able to potentiate the stimulatory effect of acetylcholine thus confirming also in the uterus its cholinergic-like effects so far observed mainly in the gastrointestinal tract.
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PMID:Action of mifentidine and ranitidine on the isolated rat uterus. 615 74

A condition similar to egg-drop syndrome-1976 (EDS-76) occurred in 14 broiler breeding flocks in 2 farms in Japan from December 1978 to January 1980, and it was diagnosed as EDS-76 by serologic and virological investigations. Egg production fell suddenly when the hens were 30 to 55 weeks of age, and the depression lasted 3 to 7 weeks. Production fell 6 to 25%. Depressed egg production was accompanied by the laying of shell-less, soft-shelled, and thin-shelled eggs associated with loss of egg-shell pigment. Eleven isolates of hemagglutinating adenovirus were isolated from cloacal swabs (10 isolates) and a uterus (1 isolate) of hens in one farm. One isolate, cloned and named JPA-1, had the same antigenicity in serologic tests and the same biological and physicochemical properties as the BC14 strain of EDS-76 virus.
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PMID:Outbreaks of egg-drop syndrome-1976 in Japan and its etiological agent. 627 91

The effect of corticosterone (CC, 0.4 and 1 microgram/ml) and of hydrocortisone (HC, 20 and 40 micrograms/ml) on the spontaneous motility and on prostaglandin (PG) generation in the uterus from ovariectomized rats, was studied. Both concentrations of CC depressed significantly the frequency of contractions but the isometric developed tension was affected only by the higher dose. HC significantly inhibited the isometric developed tension at both concentrations whereas the contractile frequency was only depressed by the higher one. The CC-inhibited motility was accompanied by a reduction in the amount of PGs released from the uterus into the bath solution. In addition, the influences of arachidonic acid (AA), linoleic acid (LA) and gamma-linolenic acid (alpha-LA) - 1 or 2 micrograms/ml - on the depression evoked by CC, were also explored. The fatty acids had no effect on the spontaneous uterine motility except in the case of alpha-LA at 1 microgram/ml. alpha-LA completely blocked the CC-evoked reduction of both tension and frequency; AA (1 microgram/ml) elicited a reversion only on frequency whereas LA had no effect at all. This reversion by a fatty acid PG-precursor might indicate that CC is able to diminish substrate availability for PG synthesis in the rat uterus.
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PMID:Effect of corticosterone, hydrocortisone and prostaglandin fatty acid precursors on the spontaneous motility of the uterus isolated from ovariectomized rats. 627 38

Low dose estrogen tablets, containing less than 50 mcg of ethinyl estradiol, were formulated because of the recognized dose response relationship with the steroid content of the tablet and side effects. These new oral contraceptives (OCs) are as effective as the older high-dose OCs, and available evidence reports fewer side effects. This discussion reviews pharmacology of these new OCs, the mechanism of action, contraindications, side effects, and problems with the low-dose estrogen OC. Ethinyl estradiol is the only estrogen used in the low-dose combination OC. There are several synthetic progestins: norethindrone, norethindrone acetate, norgestrel, levonorgestrel, and ethynodiol diacetate. These progestins have different potencies so the pharmacologic activity cannot be accurately predicted based on the amount present in the tablet. The synthetic steroids in OCs are absorbed in the small intestine, metabolized in the liver, excreted in the bile and feces with a half-life of 24 hours. The low-dose estrogen combination preparation is taken 3 out of every 4 weeks. Its contraceptive effect is primarily a result of hypothalamic mediated gonadotropin suppression with subsequent inhibition of ovulation. Contraindications to taking the low-dose OC are the same as for the higher dose OC: thromboembolic or cardiovascular disease, estrogen dependent neoplasia, markedly impaired liver function, undiagnosed genital bleeding, congenital hyperlipidemia, pregnancy, and women over age 30 who smoke. Relative contraindications include hypertension, diabetes mellitus, migraine headaches, uterine myomas, and epilepsy. The often quoted 2-5-fold increased incidence of thromboembolic disease, myocardial infarction, and stroke is based on large epidemiologic studies involving patients taking the older higher dose OCs. Current data from patients taking the newer low-dose medication demonstrate minimal if any increased incidence of these problems in young women who do not smoke. The low-dose estrogen OCs have minimal effect on lipid levels. Early reports of patients using the low-dose OC have shown little if any increased incidence of hypertension. The low-dose contraceptives have little effect on glucose tolerance, and there is no evidence to show an increased incidence of overt diabetes in OC users. There is no evidence that use of the combination OC causes an increase in cancer of the cervix, uterus, or ovaries. Clinical complaints of nausea, breast discomfort, chloasma, weight changes, and depression are reduced with the low-dose estrogen preparation. Hypomenorrhea while taking the OC occasionally occurs because the lower dose of estrogen is insufficient to stimulate the endometrial growth in face of the predominant progestin-atrophy effect.
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PMID:Oral contraceptives in 1984. 649 Mar 38


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