Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (hypertension)
170,190 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A retrospective study of 1989 records of 10,594 pregnant women registered at 47 primary health care (PHC) centers in Al-Hassa, Saudi Arabia, aimed to evaluate the performance of their prenatal care services and to gather baseline data to conduct future evaluations. These women represented 58% of pregnant women in Al-Hassa in 1989. The other pregnant women may have received prenatal care at medical facilities of the Arabian American Oil Company (ARAMCO), the National Guard, or the private sector. 53.1% of the registered women had made more than 5 prenatal care visits. 66.7% and 40.3% of all registered women received the first and second dose of tetanus toxoid, respectively. PHC center staff identified 46.2% of women as having high-risk pregnancies, but they only referred 17.5% of these women to King Fahad Hofuf Hospital for obstetric consultation. However, at least 6 major PHC centers had an obstetrician on staff. Causes in reproductive history were responsible for classifying 67.4% of the high-risk pregnancies. These causes included grandmultiparity (65%), abortion (12%; 8.3% - 2 abortions), previous Cesarean section (5.8%), RH negative (4.8%), young primipara (4.5%), and other causes, including history of preeclampsia, neonatal death, congenital anomalies, and low birth weight. Associated medical conditions made up the next highest class of high-risk pregnancies (25.4%). These conditions were sickle cell anemia (69.7%), diabetes (17.1%), hypertension (10.4%), and other causes (e.g., chronic bronchitis). Causes in current pregnancy comprised 7.2% of high-risk pregnancies and included non-sickle cell anemia (34.6%), bleeding (12%), malpresentation (17%), twins (14%), urinary tract infection (7%), and other causes (e.g., ectopic pregnancy). 67.7% of women with high-risk pregnancies delivered at King Fahad Hofuf Hospital, 28.8% at PHC centers, 7.1% at medical services of ARAMCO, and 2.4% outside of Al-Hassa area. 94% and 0.8% of high-risk pregnancy cases had unassisted and assisted vaginal births, respectively. The remaining cases delivered by Cesarean section.
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PMID:Prenatal care in primary health care centers of Al Hassa, Saudi Arabia. 129 49

The causes of maternal deaths in our hospital from 1981 to 1989 were analysed. There were 12,819 live births and 6 maternal deaths during this period, a maternal mortality rate of 46.69/per 100,000. The main cause of maternal deaths was acute fatty liver of pregnancy (50%), and next cardiac disease, acute hemorrhagic necrotic pancreatitis and hemorrhage of subarachnoid space (each 16.67%). There was no death due to obstetric hemorrhage, pregnancy induced hypertension syndrome or ectopic pregnancy. It is suggested that needle biopsy of the liver should be done for pregnant women with jaundice of unknown cause. Pregnant women with cardiac disease should be under the care of both obstetrician and internist in collaboration and cesarean section is indicated when the woman's cardiac function remains at grade 3 or 4.
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PMID:[Causes of maternal death. A 10-year case analysis]. 150 70

The antiprogestin RU 486 converts the early pregnant uterus by increasing the sensitivity of the myometrium to prostaglandin (PG). These effects of antiprogestin have resulted in the development of nonsurgical procedures to abort embryos based on a combination of RU 486 and different PG-analogues administered vaginally or intramuscularly. RU 486 also has a softening effect on the cervix which may be used as pretreatment in second and third trimester abortions. The effects, mode of action, dangers, and the many other postulated clinical implications (like breast cancer, meningioma, ectopic pregnancy, fetal death in utero, induction of labour, initiation and promotion of lactation, endometrial or ovarian cancers, leukemia, Cushing's syndrome, uterine adenomyosis, acute uremia, leiomyosarcoma, hypertension, etc.) are discussed.
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PMID:[Mifepristone (RU 486)]. 151 99

For women beyond the desire for childbearing, the contraceptive options are discussed as appropriate for the age and in light of risks and benefits. Reeducation and careful history taking are important. A pregnancy for a woman 40 years places a woman at greater risk for an elective abortion and greater risk of maternal mortality from abortion; low dose contraceptive use can have beneficial effects for menopausal women. Methods are grouped as contraceptive steroids (combination pills, progestin-only pills, oral preparations, implants, and injections), IUDs, barrier methods (diaphragms, cervical caps, vaginal sponges, spermicides, and contraceptive film), condoms, sterilization, and natural family planning. Empowering women means providing current scientific information and urging women to examine their lives, and to review how and why contraceptive choices were made, and the consequences of the choices. Sexually transmitted disease counseling is appropriate for women in new relationships. A positive attitude toward menopause needs to be conveyed. Combination pills at the lowest dose possible are recommended for women 35 years who are healthy, nonsmoking (or smoking 15 cigarettes/day), blood group O, and able to derive benefits from the pill. Benefits include a 30% reduction in uterine fibroids and protection against endometrial cancer, and decreased risk of ectopic pregnancy, pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), and iron deficiency anemia. Multivitamin use with the pill is recommended due to reduced liver stores of vitamin A. Women 40 years with a parent dying of cardiac disease 50 years or with a history of hypertension, diabetes, or hyperlipidemia are not suitable candidates. 35 mcg preparations are recommended for women 35-45 years, and 20 mcg for women over 45 years. Progestin-only pills are recommended for those with contraindication to estrogen, but have a higher pregnancy rate. IUD use among older women may be difficult due to cervical or pelvic surgery; there is a higher incidence of PID and ectopic pregnancy with IUD use. Barrier methods are more successful for older women due to the changing vaginal anatomy. Vasectomy is the safest sterilization procedure.
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PMID:Contraception for midlife women. 159 31

Trends in selected pregnancy complications from 1969 to 1987 in a tertiary hospital in Malaysia are presented. Complications reviewed were abortion, ectopic pregnancy, anemia, hypertension, hyperemesis, antepartum and postpartum hemorrhage. Possible explanations for the observed trends were discussed, including the role of improved obstetric care and changes in the characteristics of the childbearing population. The data presented give some indication of maternal morbidity in the childbearing population served by this tertiary center and should lead to improvements in provision of services as well as in health data collection in the future.
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PMID:Trends in selected obstetric complications from University Hospital, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. 168 72

The beneficial effects of combined estrogen-progestin-containing oral contraceptives (OCs) include prevention of pregnancy (less than 1 failure out of 100 regular users); the prevention of ectopic pregnancy; the reduction of preeclampsia (2.4 times lower risk compared with barrier methods); and reduction of pelvic inflammation to about one-half. The effects on menstruation include the reduction of sideropenic anemia (by lowering the incidence and duration of menstruation, OCs reduce the loss of iron to 50% or to as much as 33%); dysmenorrhea by 40% (symptoms receded in 90% of users); and premenstrual syndrome by 30%. OCs exert a favorable effect on menstrual epilepsy; reduce sports-related accidents in the premenstrual and menstrual periods; and reduce intermenstrual bleeding. The protection from cancer includes the lowering of endometrial cancer risk (every 2 years of use reduces the risk by 38%, 12 years of use by 70%, and the beneficial effects last 3-15 years); reduction of the risk of the ovarian cancer (already 3-6 months of use reduces the risk by 30%, and more than 5 years by 50% in women under 50 years of age with a longterm effect of 10 years or more, which drops sharply in women over 60 who are mostly at risk). Among other beneficial effects, they reduce benign mastopathy by 50-75%; reduce the risk of follicular ovarian cysts to 50% and the risk of corpus luteal ovarian cysts to 1/5; and they lessen bone loss which favorably affects osteoporosis. Low-dose OCs minimize the well-known risks of thrombotic and cerebrovascular accidents, myocardial infarction, hypertension, altered carbohydrate metabolism, gallbladder diseases, and liver cancer. A new OC with 30 mcg of ethinyl estradiol was tested with daily doses of 150 mcg of desogestrel. The high density lipoprotein (HDL) either increased or did not change with desogestrel: the HDL2 subfraction that protects from atherosclerosis did not change, and probably the HDL3 raised the HDL level.
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PMID:[Favorable effects of oral estrogen-progestin contraception]. 181 41

Infertility, spontaneous abortions and trisomic anomalies increase with maternal age, as do ectopic pregnancy, low birth weight, macrosomia, abruptio placentae and labor dysfunction. However, those phenomena are multifactorial in origin and cannot be ascribed solely to advancing age. Older pregnant women are also at increased risk for diabetes and hypertension. Whereas the older gravida is at increased risk for maternal mortality and morbidity and for fetal and infant mortality, those problems are explainable in large part by coexisting medical complications. The healthy older pregnant woman who receives appropriate prepregnancy counseling and up-to-date perinatal care can achieve results comparable to those achieved by younger ones.
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PMID:Reproduction in the older gravida. A literature review. 181 94

5 major criteria are used to evaluate family planning methods: efficacy, both theoretical and practical; acceptability as measured by continuation of use; safety; reversibility; and cost, including the cost of treatment, follow-up, and screening for contraindications. Traditional family planning methods are mostly based on periodic abstinence during the presumed fertile period. The calendar, temperature, Billings or cervical mucus, and symptothermal methods are based on observation of different symptoms of ovulation and fertility. Their advantages are that they do not require intervention by health personnel, their costs of use are nil, and they are morally acceptable to some couples. Their efficacy is lower than that of other methods and they should be viewed as methods to space rather than limit births. The withdrawal method, also less effective, requires active cooperation by the male partner. Among mechanical methods, the use of condoms has increased recently because of the protection they offer against HIV infection and other sexually transmitted diseases. Their efficacy depends on correct use, regular use, and the quality of the condom. The Pearl index varies from 93099 per 100 woman-years. The diaphragm must be individually measured and should be used with spermicides. The Pearl index ranges from 85095 per 100 woman-years. Spermicides, generally either nonoxynol-9 or benzalkonium chloride, are surfactants that have a Pearl index of 83-97 per 100 woman-years. They are available as creams, jellies, foams, suppositories, tablets, or impregnated sponges. Most failures appear due to errors of utilization. The mechanism of action of the IUD is imperfectly understood, but it is known to prevent nidation of the fertilized egg. Copper devised have higher rates of efficacy and tolerance. Pearl indices range from 95-99.5. Contraindications include genital infection, uterine anomalies, valvular cardiopathy, and coagulation problems. The IUD is relatively contraindicated if there is history of ectopic pregnancy or upper genital tract infections. The combined oral contraceptive is the most widely utilized method in France. The Pearl index is nearly 100 in the absence of forgetting, vomiting, or drug interactions. The contraindications are basically those of estrogens: history of thrombosis, prolonged bedrest, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, hepatic disorders, hormonodependent cancers, or smoking after age 35. Progestin-only methods are available in 3 forms: low-dose pills which must be taken at the same time each day, higher-dosed progestins taken for 20 days each month, and injectable progestins providing contraception for 8-12 weeks. Postcoital contraception using OCs or IUDs is possible but not well known among women or physicians. The Neuwirth law authorizing use of contraception in France was passed in 1967. Amendments in 1974 improved access and provided for reimbursement for some methods, but some newer forms are not reimbursed.
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PMID:[Family planning. Objectives, measures, regulations, structures]. 185 35

To identify causes and risk factors for pregnancy-related mortality in New York City, we analyzed 224 pregnancy-related deaths that occurred from 1980 to 1984. The leading causes of death were ectopic pregnancy complications, embolism, intrapartum cardiac arrest, and hypertension. Mortality ratios were determined by comparing the characteristics of the women whose death was pregnancy-related with those of women who had survived delivery of a live infant in New York City during the same period. Black and Hispanic women had mortality ratios that were respectively 4.2 and 2.0 times higher than those for white, non-Hispanic women. In comparison with women aged 20 to 24, those older than 30 were more than twice as likely to die from pregnancy-related causes, and those older than 40 were five times as likely to do so. Other factors that were associated with an increased risk of pregnancy-related mortality included 9 to 11 years of education, lack of private medical insurance, more than five previous pregnancies, and fewer than five prenatal visits. This study suggests that changes in current maternal-health and family-planning services will be required to achieve further reductions in preventable pregnancy-related mortality.
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PMID:Pregnancy-related mortality in New York City, 1980 to 1984: causes of death and associated risk factors. 199 10

The overall risk of oral contraceptive (OC) use is minimal when women over 35 years of age, smokers, and those with multiple risk factors (thromboembolic disorders, cerebrovascular or coronary artery disease, liver tumors, breast cancer, estrogen-dependent neoplasms, undiagnosed abnormal genital bleeding, and congenital hyperlipidemia) are excluded. OC use increases the risk of hypertension by 1-5%, depending on age, parity, and duration of use, but even this small risk is decreased when multiphasic OCs are prescribed. Deep venous thrombosis in the leg is 4 times more prevalent in OC users than nonusers and the risk of superficial thrombosis is doubled. Again, fewer thromboembolic complications occur when the estrogen dosage is low. The risk of myocardial infarction is not believed to increase with OC use as long as other risk factors--smoking, obesity, hypertension, age over 35 years, hypercholesterolemia--are not present. Studies involving the original high-dose OCs revealed a 3-fold increase in the risk of thrombotic stroke and a 2-fold increase in the risk of hemorrhagic stroke, but low-dose OCs appear to have no effect on the potential for stroke. The impact of OC use on breast cancer cannot yet be determined given the very long latency period of this cancer. In terms of benign breast disease, OC users have been shown to be at substantially reduced risk of lesions, fibroadenomas, and fibrocystic changes. OCs also protect women from endometrial and ovarian cancer, although the pill seems to accelerate the progression of cervical dysplasia. Other beneficial effects of OC use include reductions in the incidence of pelvic inflammatory disease, endometriosis, ectopic pregnancy, and ovarian cysts.
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PMID:Oral contraceptive pills. Part II: Potential complications and health benefits. 228 19


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