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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (
headache
)
56,091
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To assess the contribution of gonadal steroids to sexual behavior in aging women, we conducted a 10-week, double-blind, hormone replacement study of 40 naturally menopausal women (mean age, 58.3 yr). Prospective measurements of basal and stimulated vaginal vasocongestion and daily self-reports of mood, physical symptoms, sexual behavior, and perceived sexual pleasure were collected. Daily treatments were either conjugated equine estrogen, i.e. Premarin (P; 0.625 mg), Premarin and medroxyprogesterone acetate, i.e. Provera (PP; 0.625 and 5 mg, respectively), Premarin and methyltestosterone (PT; 0.625 and 5 mg, respectively), or placebo (PL). Compared to placebo, hormone treatment had significantly reduced
hot flashes
in the P and PP groups by week 4 and in the PT group by week 5.
Headaches
were reduced in the P vs. PL group, only. Hormone treatment did not significantly alter mood ratings, sexual behaviors, or psychophysiologically measured sexual arousal. PT treatment significantly increased reports of pleasure from masturbation compared to the other three groups, underscoring the apparent contribution of androgens to self-stimulatory behavior. However, the data suggest that in these physically and sexually healthy women, gonadal steroids do not influence major components of sexual functioning, including arousal and a wide variety of sexual activity and experience.
...
PMID:Effects of estrogen, androgen, and progestin on sexual psychophysiology and behavior in postmenopausal women. 169 Jul 46
The possibility that meningioma growth may be related to female sex hormone levels is suggested by several lines of evidence. Meningiomas are twice as common in women as in men, have been observed to wax and wane with pregnancy, and are positively associated with breast cancer. A physiological explanation for these phenomena is provided by the finding of steroid hormone receptors in meningiomas. However, unlike breast cancer, meningiomas are much more commonly positive for progesterone receptors than for estrogen receptors. The authors initiated a study on long-term oral therapy of unresectable meningiomas with the antiprogesterone mifepristone (RU486). Fourteen patients received mifepristone in daily doses of 200 mg for periods ranging from 2 to 31+ months (greater than or equal to 6 months in 12 patients). Five patients have shown signs of objective response (reduced tumor measurement on computerized tomography scan or magnetic resonance image, or improved visual field examination). Three have also experienced subjective improvement (improved extraocular muscle function or relief from
headache
). The side effects of long-term mifepristone therapy have been mild. Fatigue was noted in 11 of the 14 patients. Other side effects included
hot flashes
in five patients, gynecomastia in three, partial alopecia in two, and cessation of menses in two. Long-term therapy with mifepristone is a new therapeutic option that may have efficacy in cases of unresectable benign meningioma.
...
PMID:Treatment of unresectable meningiomas with the antiprogesterone agent mifepristone. 203 44
The purpose of this study, designed as an open multicenter trial, was to test the antihypertensive efficacy, patient acceptability, and side effects of long-term treatment with slow-release nifedipine in a large population. The drug was studied in 330 outpatients with essential hypertension, WHO stage 1-2, recruited in 20 hospital centers. After washout period was completed, nifedipine (20 mg bid) was given for 1 month (phase 1). Then, the treatment was extended for 4 months (phase 2) with variable doses (range 20-80 mg daily). No other antihypertensive drugs were administered during phase 1. However diuretics, beta blockers, or captopril were added to nifedipine during phase 2 in 11 patients. Seventy patients did not meet criteria for inclusion at washout. During phase 1 and 2, 66 additional patients were excluded due to side effects, the need of other antihypertensive drugs, or non-compliance. Systolic blood pressure significantly lowered (10% or more) in 84% patients in phase 1 and in 76% in phase 2. No responders were 6.1% and 3.6%, respectively. Diastolic blood pressure was normalized in 60% of patients after 5 months of therapy. Effects on blood pressure were equal in young patients and in the elderly, but a minimal rise in heart rate was recorded in younger patients. At least one side effect occurred in 46.6% patients, mainly
headache
(15.4%),
hot flashes
(13.3%), ankle edema (12.8%), or palpitation (6.6%). Sixteen patients (8.2%) were obliged to stop nifedipine treatment due to the severity of the side effects. This trial confirms the efficacy of nifedipine in hypertension, both in young and in aged patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Long-term therapy with slow-release nifedipine in essential hypertension. 207 4
The authors employed a gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist (GnRH-a) (D-His6-pro9-NET-GnRH) to treat 19 patients with symptomatic uterine leiomyomata, by daily subcutaneous injections (4 micrograms/kg) for 6 months. After therapy, patients were followed for 6 months without any therapy. Uterine volumes were measured by serial pelvic examinations and pelvic sonography. Measurements of serum estradiol, luteinizing hormone, and follicle-stimulating hormone were used to assess treatment response. Pituitary desensitization and hypoestrogenemia were achieved in all within 8 weeks, and in 18 of 19, hypoestrogenemia was maintained for the duration. Uterine volume at the conclusion of therapy (207.5 +/- 152.7 ml) was significantly reduced in all patients when compared with pretreatment sizes (420.8 +/- 276.4, P less than 0.05). Side effects included
hot flashes
(78%), vaginal dryness (32%), and transient frontal
headaches
(55%). All patients reported partial or complete relief from their symptomatic leiomyomata. Uterine volume at the conclusion of follow-up (345.4 +/- 195.7 ml) was greater than at the conclusion of therapy. Menses resumed in all patients within 4 to 8 weeks. In conclusion, GnRH-a therapy does not provide definitive therapy for symptomatic uterine leiomyomata but is effective in reducing the size of leiomyomata as a temporary measure. Gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist therapy may be useful as an adjunct before myomectomy or hysterectomy and deserves further investigation.
...
PMID:Efficacy of a gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist in the treatment of uterine leiomyomata: long-term follow-up. 249 32
The present investigation was undertaken to establish the relation between climacteric symptoms, ovarian function, ageing, and psychological factors. The subjects were as follows; 1,270 women who received a screening test for cervical cancer and 247 women following hysterectomy. The methods of investigation were Kupperman menopausal index (K-index), Cornell Medical Index (CMI) and YG character questionnaire (YG test). The following results were obtained: 1) the K-index increased until 39 years of age and was constant after 40 years. Five symptoms (chills, nervousness, melancholia, excitability and vertigo) were not influenced by ageing, and seven symptoms (panting, hypesthesia, insomnia, wakefulness, fatigue, palpitation and formication) increased with age.
Hot flushes
, perspiration, numbness, shoulder stiffness, lumbago, and
headache
, occurred at peak frequency in the climacteric period. 2) In hot flushes, perspiration, numbness, hypesthesia, shoulder stiffness, lumbago, and formication, a significant difference was found between the control and those patients who had received bilateral oophorectomy. 3) The K-index and CMI score were significantly correlated, and six symptoms (palpitation, panting, excitability, vertigo, wakefulness and formication) in particular were related to CMI. 4) The K-index was lowest in the patients indicated to be the D type by the YG test, and was highest in the patients of the B.E type. Six symptoms (excitability, palpitation, panting, melanchoria, hypesthesia and formication) were thought to be associated with the character of the patients. Results showed that four symptoms (hot flushes, perspiration, numbness, shoulder stiffness and lumbago) were closely related to ovarian function, and three symptoms (panting, excitability, and palpitation) depended largely on mental factors. The relationship between vasomortor symptoms and gonadotropin was investigated.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Study on climacteric symptoms in relation to ovarian function ageing and psychologic factors]. 249 39
Two hundred patients clinically certified as suffering from anxiety state were investigated with a view to understanding the clinical manifestation of the condition in Nigeria. We found that 67 symptoms were manifested by those patients, but only 15 symptoms were presented by about 10% of the sample. These common symptoms were: frequent
headaches
, difficulty in falling asleep, flushing, difficulty in concentrating, rapid or irregular heart beating, weakness,
hot flashes
, dizziness, feeling of something crawling in the head, heaviness of the head, nervousness, poor appetite, poor sight, nightmares, and chest pain. The five major precipitating factors were physical ailments, studying and examinations, use of drugs, psychological phenomona, pregnancy and childbirth, in decreasing order of magnitude. The most vulnerable age group was between 18 and 23 years old. The first born children account for the highest number of anxiety patients, but as the number of siblings increases, the vulnerability of the last-born increases. Anxiety neurosis as seen here is predominantly a problem of single males and females with secondary school education.
...
PMID:Clinical anxiety in Nigeria. 340 42
The initial findings of this study indicate that menopause is regarded as a natural life-cycle transition in Japan in which the biological marker of cessation of menstruation is not considered to be of great importance. Symptom reporting among all respondents is generally low regardless of menopausal status, and symptoms such as shoulder stiffness and
headaches
, which are reported frequently, are not linked specifically to menopausal status (even though individual informants may perceive them to be so). Symptoms of
hot flashes
and sudden perspiration are higher among peri- and post-menopausal women, but their prevalence appears to be much lower than research findings from other areas to date. Reports by Japanese gynecologists emphasize that menopausal women are liable to present with numerous non-specific somatic complaints. This may well be an accurate representation of a clinical population, but the findings of this present study indicate that such a picture is by no means representative of the average middle-aged female population in Japan. While occupational differences do not contribute to variation in reported symptomatology (with the exception of lumbago and shoulder stiffness), there are nevertheless considerable differences in the subjective meaning of menopause, many of which can be accounted for by class and occupational differences. Presentation of these differences awaits a future publication, but there is one topic which is of concern to the majority of the respondents from each of the sub-samples. The present generation of women entering their 50's are the first where the majority must face later middle age in a nuclear family, along with their husbands, although both they and their husbands have been socialized for the more distant male/female relationships of an extended family. Japanese women cannot look forward, as they did in the past, to the power and comforts derived from running an extended family; on the contrary many can expect a late middle age of looking after bed-ridden parents or parents-in-law, and a lonely, isolated and often poverty-stricken old age (Steslicke 1984), since many pension programs are by no means adequate. Some of their fears about aging are expressed in their views on menopause, but these fears do not appear to be manifested at all prominently as either psychological or somatic representations. When asked to compare their lives with that of their own mothers, stories of incredible hardships from pre- and immediately post-war Japan are vividly portrayed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Ambiguities of aging: Japanese experience and perceptions of menopause. 348 95
Leuprolide (Lupron, TAP Pharmaceuticals, North Chicago), a gonadotropin-releasing hormone analogue, was administered to 26 premenopausal women with metastatic breast cancer. Of 25 evaluable patients, 11 (44%) had a partial response with a median duration of 39 weeks and five (20%) remained stable. Six patients showed early rapid progression of their disease. Toxicity was mild and included
hot flashes
, nausea, vomiting, and
headache
. Leuprolide induced amenorrhea in all patients who received treatment for ten weeks or longer. We conclude that this GnRH analogue provides a safe and effective means of producing medical castration in premenopausal patients with metastatic breast carcinoma.
...
PMID:Medical castration produced by the GnRH analogue leuprolide to treat metastatic breast cancer. 392 58
An approach to the management of the climacteric and postmenopausal patient is outlined. Menopause refers to the time at which menstruation ceases; climacteric, the period of transition. Neither is pathological. After the functional life of the ovary terminates when the supply of primary oocytes is exhausted, the feedback mechanism with FSH is disrupted leading to high blood and urinary levels of FSH. Estrogen often continues to be produced for about 10 years postmenopausally. Hormone therapy is indicated to treat vasomotor instability, such as
hot flashes
, numbness and tingling, vertigo, cold hands and feet, palpitations and
headache
, dysfunctional uterine bleeding, and senile vaginitis. The psychological changes often noted are functional and not due to estrogen withdrawal. There is currently no proof of the efficacy of long term estrogen replacement as a means of preventing heart diseases or osteoporosis.
...
PMID:Management of the climacteric and postmenopausal woman. 503 99
Six patients with symptomatic leiomyomata uteri and in whom surgical treatment was indicated received, during 3 months, intramuscular leuprolide acetate, 3,75 mg monthly, in order to 1) achieve a reduction of myomata size and 2) recover an anemic patient before surgery. In every patient, amenorrhea was induced since the second month of treatment. A significant decrease of myomas sizes was achieved. The reduction of the volume of the largest myoma in each case, varied between 51% and 77% (x = 60% +/- ES 4,3) LH and estradiol plasma levels diminished significantly and FSH did not changed in response to treatment. Side effects were well tolerated.
Hot flashes
were present in all patients,
headaches
in 2 and loss of strength in 2. Surgery was accomplished after 3 months of treatment. Myomectomy was performed in 5 cases and total hysterectomy in 1. Uterine shrinkage and the period of amenorrhea induced by Lupron-depot facilitated hysterectomy and myomectomy techniques and the recovery of one patient with a severe anemia.
...
PMID:[Size reduction of uterine myomas with monthly administered leuprolide acetate]. 756 60
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