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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0019693 (
HIV
)
170,526
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Mortality is the greatest concern in assessing risks of modern reversible contraception. The problems identified with older oral contraceptives (OCs) have decreased with the lower doses in current OCs. These problems include cardiovascular and thrombotic effects, changes in lipid metabolism,
breast cancer
, liver cancer, increased risk of chlamydia cervicitis, no protection against sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) and
HIV
, and interferes with breast feeding. On the other hand, OCs protect against anemia, menstrual disorders, ectopic pregnancy, acute pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), and ovarian and endometrial cancer. Since the contraceptive implant, Norplant, has no estrogens, it does not have the cardiovascular risks associated with OCs. Possible risks from Norplant use include changes in carbohydrate, liver, and lipid metabolism but they tend to be clinically insignificant and no protection against STDs/
HIV
. Menstruation disorders are the major side effect. Apparent benefits of Norplant are protection against anemia and ectopic pregnancy and no effect on lactation. The injectable contraceptive, Depo-Provera, causes menstrual changes, may slightly increase the risk of
breast cancer
, may decrease bone density, and does not protect against STDs/
HIV
. It protects against endometrial cancer. It has no effect on metabolism. Risks associated with the IUD include PID, perforation, anemia, increased menstrual bleeding, and pregnancy. IUDs do not affect the quantity of composition of breast milk. They are best suited for women in a mutually monogamous, long-term relationship. Barrier methods provide some degree of protection against STDs/
HIV
and PID. Condoms provide the most protection. They do not affect lactation. Their major complications are contraceptive failure and risks associated with pregnancy. For all women, especially those in high risk categories, one must balance the risks of modern contraceptive use with the risks of childbearing and with their benefits.
...
PMID:The safety of modern contraceptives. 784 6
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.
...
PMID:[Contraception. Recommendations from a group of experts]. 790 65
The estimation of the incidence of chronic diseases from mortality and survival rates is shown to be attainable, under some simplifying hypotheses, through the solution of a convolution equation. Exact solutions are derived for the cases in which survival times of incident cases are exponential or gamma distributed. Applications to
breast cancer
,
HIV infection
and stomach cancer incidence in the Italian population are presented.
...
PMID:Relationships between incidence and mortality in non-reversible diseases. 813 42
Breast cancer
chemotherapy and
HIV
-1 viral infection (AIDS) can result in respective transient or irreversible losses of up to 40-50% of circulating lymphocytes. The relationship of lymphopenia on tumor immunosurveillance and the control of opportunistic infections has yet to be established. The objective of this study was to characterize the changes in natural killer (NK) and lymphokine activated killer (LAK) cell function associated with cytotoxic drug therapy,
breast cancer
and
HIV
-1 infection. NK and LAK activities were measured at multiple effector to target ratios. Exponential regression analysis of target cell lysis determined the maximal % target kill and the lytic potential of effector cells. Flow cytometric analysis of lymphocyte subsets in seropositive populations was performed to determine the % of NK(CD56+) cells. Taken together, our findings indicate that cytotoxic NK pool sizes increased in
breast cancer
patients, diminish consequent to chemotherapy. The functional capacity of individual NK and LAK cells remains intact. In contrast, the diminution of NK and LAK functional responses in
HIV
-1 seropositive individuals is associated with reductions in cytotoxic NK and LAK pool sizes, as well as marked reductions in cytolytic function of individual cells. Zidovudine (AZT) treatment did not affect LAK activity in HIV+ subgroups. Our findings indicate that NK and activated LAK functions are affected both by chemotherapy and disease etiology.
...
PMID:Different effects of breast cancer, HIV-1 infection and chemotherapy on inducible natural immunity. 815 88
Novel methods of human fertility regulation in the post-
HIV
era are discussed, based on the control of regulatory peptides and their respective genes. 3 mechanisms are examined: selective control of the genes encoding the gonadotropins and/or the interception of circulating gonadotropins by receptor antagonists or binding proteins; the selective neutralization of hCG and other signals involved in the maternal recognition of pregnancy by receptor antagonists and antibodies; and the interception of the putative disintegrin-integrin recognition events involved in sperm-oocyte recognition and fusion. By 2020, contraception, abortion, and unplanned pregnancy could be replaced by reversible sterilization based on the molecular interception of events involved in sperm-oocyte recognition and fusion. Contraceptive-like steroids will be targeted to positive health care, with regard to
breast cancer
and osteoporosis. The permanent ablation of the gonadotrophs could provide a reversible form of sterilization for both men and women beyond the age of 30 years requiring longterm use of steroid replacement therapy which could support libido and provide protection against cancer and osteoporosis. A first-generation prototype vaccine has been developed in which beta-hCG-carboxy terminal peptide (beta-hCG-CTP) has been linked to a carrier conjugate (diphtheria toxoid), mixed with a synthetic immuno-stimulant, and formulated into a viscous water emulsion. The disintegrin-integrin motives expressed by sperm and oocytes could be used as targets for female contraception. Strategies of vaccination and gene therapy could circumvent the problems of dose, time, and location for the longterm regulation of fertility. In the vaccination strategy, the immune system provides both great specificity and a long duration of action. Gene therapy is currently the subject of a massive research endeavor designed to develop treatments for some of the 2500 inherited diseases afflicting humans.
...
PMID:Contraception for the year 2020. 832 11
Currently, more than 50% of married women of childbearing age are using a form of contraception. Between 1960-65 and 1985-90, the number of contraceptive users in all developing countries increased from 31 to 381 million, in East Asia from 18 to 217 million, in Latin America from 4 to 44 million, in South Asia from 8 to 94 million, and in Africa from 2 to 18 million. WHO has recently estimated that over 500,000 women die each year from causes related to pregnancy and childbirth. With a worldwide estimate of 36-53 million induced abortions performed each year, between 125,000 and 170,000 women die each year because of unsafe abortions. According to data from the World Fertility Survey, short spacing between births raises the average chances of offspring dying in infancy by 60-70% and the chances of dying before the age of 5 years by about 50%. WHO's minimal estimate for yearly incidence of bacterial and viral STDs (excluding
HIV infection
) is 130 million. Most STDs have more serious sequelae in women than in men and lead to pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), permanent infertility, and the risk of ectopic pregnancy. African countries with high incidence of STDs have the lowest prevalences of contraceptive use. A recent examination of the WHO international data base of 22,908 IUD insertions and 51,399 woman-years of follow-up indicates that the occurrence of PID in IUD users is most strongly related to the insertion process and to background STD risk and suggests that PID is an infrequent occurrence after the insertion period. A WHO Scientific Working Group review confirmed the beneficial effects of oral contraceptives in reducing the risk of ovarian cancer, endometrial cancer, and biopsy-proven benign breast diseases. A WHO collaborative study in 5 centers in Kenya, Mexico, and Thailand provided assurance that women who used DMPA for a long time and who initiated use many years previously are not at increased risk of
breast cancer
.
...
PMID:Contraception and women's health. 832 13
Data are presented on the frequency of malignant tumours registered at the population-based cancer registry in the southern prefecture of Butare, Rwanda, from May 1991 until 2 months before the outbreak of civil war in April 1994. Beginning in 1992, subjects were also interviewed about socio-demographic and life-style factors that have been associated with cancer risk in the West. The distribution of cancer in Rwanda is similar to that in other countries in sub-Saharan Africa. The most frequent cancers are those with possible infectious aetiologies: liver cancer (12%), cervical cancer (12%) and stomach cancer (9%). In addition, cancers known to be associated with
HIV infection
are relatively frequent (Kaposi's sarcoma [6%] and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma [3%]). Chronic infection, including infection with
HIV
, high parity and multiple sexual partners are important determinants of cancer incidence in this population. Tobacco consumption is low in Rwanda and there are few tobacco-related tumours, such as lung and laryngeal cancer. Other tumours believed to be associated with aspects of Western life-style, such as colorectal and
breast cancer
, are also relatively infrequent.
...
PMID:Cancer in Rwanda. 860 71
Provision of automated support for planning protocol-directed therapy requires a computer program to take as input clinical data stored in an electronic patient-record system and to generate as output recommendations for therapeutic interventions and laboratory testing that are defined by applicable protocols. This paper presents a synthesis of research carried out at Stanford University to model the therapy-planning task and to demonstrate a component-based architecture for building protocol-based decision-support systems. We have constructed general-purpose software components that (1) interpret abstract protocol specifications to construct appropriate patient-specific treatment plans; (2) infer from time-stamped patient data higher-level, interval-based, abstract concepts; (3) perform time-oriented queries on a time-oriented patient database; and (4) allow acquisition and maintenance of protocol knowledge in a manner that facilitates efficient processing both by humans and by computers. We have implemented these components in a computer system known as EON. Each of the components has been developed, evaluated, and reported independently. We have evaluated the integration of the components as a composite architecture by implementing T-HELPER, a computer-based patient-record system that uses EON to offer advice regarding the management of patients who are following clinical trial protocols for AIDS or
HIV infection
. A test of the reuse of the software components in a different clinical domain demonstrated rapid development of a prototype application to support protocol-based care of patients who have
breast cancer
.
...
PMID:EON: a component-based approach to automation of protocol-directed therapy. 893 Aug 54
Breast cancer
antigens RAK-p120, -p42, -p25 were detected in 100% of
breast cancer
cases tested (71 cases). Only 10% of adjacent tissue cases tested positive for all three cancer antigens, and 17.5% of the cases tested positive for two antigens only. Eighty-five percent of histologically normal breast tissue samples, isolated either from
breast cancer
patients or patients with advanced fibrocystic disease, tested RAK-negative, with the exception of low expression of p25, observed in some patients. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) with
HIV
-1 gp 41-derived primers revealed cancer-associated DNA fragments of similar size (140 bp) as in
HIV
-1 genome. Fifty-four percent of cancer adjacent tissues, and 50% of malignancy-free breast tissue samples, tested PCR-negative. It is suggested that genetic predisposition to cancer may be associated with the presence of RAK genes, while expression of RAK antigens marks an already ongoing process of malignant changes.
...
PMID:New protein and PCR markers RAK for diagnosis, prognosis and surgery guidance for breast cancer. 902 74
We examined the relationship between coping responses and mood states among three samples of patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection (n=26), end-stage renal failure (n=98), and
breast cancer
(n= 60). Avoidance scores differed significantly across the groups, being highest in those with
HIV infection
. The avoidance scores were significantly and positively correlated with depression scores. However, patients with
HIV infection
did not fulfill the diagnostic criteria for major depression. Although patients with
HIV infection
may have minor psychiatric symptoms, results suggest that the symptoms are not strong enough to warrant a psychiatric diagnosis of mood disorder. It might be clinically important to attend to avoidance behaviors and thoughts which may develop into the manifestation of depression.
...
PMID:Subclinical depressive symptoms in HIV are related to avoidance coping responses: a comparison with end-stage renal failure and breast cancer. 914 5
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