Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0027497 (
nausea
)
23,468
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A new form of postcoital contraceptive therapy is described as more effective because of reduced incidence of
nausea
, vomiting, and breast tenderness. Other forms of emergency contraceptive pills (ECPs) are the "Yuzpe" method or high-dose contraceptives. The new method calls for administration of 3 200-mg tablets of danocrine (Danazol) within 72 hours of unprotected intercourse and a second dose 12 hours later. There are mixed reviews of the efficacy of danocrine and ECPs. In one comparative study of ECP and danocrine use, efficacy of danocrine was greater but not significantly so. Another study found danocrine so ineffective that the study was halted. ECP use would not end unintended pregnancies caused by method failure unless it was condom failure. Estimates of ECP use involve 75% of the 1.7 million women with user or method failure, all 1.9 million women with unintended pregnancies from nonuse of contraceptives, and some of the 1.6 million abortion users. An obstacle to ECP use is lack of knowledge due to lack of Food and Drug Administration approval of Ovral and Danazol and physician concern for legal liability. Another obstacle consists in the logistics of obtaining ECPs and the fear of side effects. Provision of ECP kits with 3-5 regimens in clinic or physician offices is proposed for women without contraindications. Anticipated objections are reported to be encouragement of contraceptive risk taking, the health risks of repeated use, restrictions in Title X programs, and the drug effect on fertilization. Another proposal is to sell ECPs as over the counter drugs or in vending machines and changing US contraceptive prescription laws. Objections to elimination of the physician prescription requirement might be an increase in use among women with contraindications and a decrease in regular checkups and Pap tests. The objections could be overcome with proper package labeling. Paternalism is not a sufficient justification for requiring prescription of contraceptives and medical visits. ECPs, in fact, are already available as low dose contraceptives such as Lo/Ovral,
Nordette
,
Levlen
,
Triphasil
, and
Tri-Levlen
when 4 pills are used. Instructions for ECP use are given.
...
PMID:Emergency contraceptive pills: a simple proposal to reduce unintended pregnancies. 148 31
The
Norplant System
consists of 6 capsules each containing 36 mg of crystal line levonorgestrel (LNG), for a total dose of 216 mg LNG. The capsules are inserted subdermally in the mid-upper arm, and LNG diffuses continuously through the capsule walls for 5 years. In the United States the
Norplant System
was approved in December 1990. The initial rate of hormone delivery is about 85 mcg/day, then decreases over the next 9 months to 5 mcg/day, and over the ensuing 9 months to 35 mcg/day. Thereafter, the diffusion rate levels off for the next 3.5 years, averaging around 30-35 mcg/day. Removal results in a drop in the plasma concentration of levonorgestrel to below contraceptive levels within 24 hours and below the detectable limit of .1 pg/ml at 96 hours. Preliminarily data from 402 users over 5 years show improvements of Norplant produced better efficacy in all weight classes and a lowered cumulative rate of 1.1 pregnancies of 100 users. The pregnancy rate for the first year of use is 02., better than for oral contraceptives. Side effects include headache, nervousness,
nausea
, dizziness, dermatitis, acne, change of appetite, breast tenderness, minimal weight gain, some change in hair distribution, and adnexal enlargement. Adverse reactions include breast discharge, possible cervicitis, musculoskeletal pain, abdominal discomfort, leukorrhea, and vaginitis. More than the usual number of bleeding days occurred in slightly more than one fourth of the patients, prolonged bleeding in 27.6% spotting in 17.1% and amenorrhea in 9.4% of patients. Hyperlipidemic users should be observed for possible low-density lipoprotein elevations. The cumulative discontinuation rate for pregnancy was 3.9 per 100 users; for bleeding irregularities the rate was 25.1 per 100 users, and for other medical results it was about 22.4 per 100 users. Personal reasons for discontinuation accounted for 38.7 per 100 users, equivalent to a cumulative continuation rate of about 30 per 100 users over the 5-year duration.
...
PMID:The NORPLANT system of contraception. 168 4
A comparison of the triphasic
Triphasil
and the combined oral contraceptive Diane 50 for treatment of acne for 6 cycles showed significant improvement in both groups.
Triphasil
(Wyeth-Ayerst) contains 50 mcg levonorgestrel and 30 mcg ethinyl estradiol, 75 mcg levonorgestrel and 40 mcg ethinyl estradiol for 5 days and 125 mcg levonorgestrel and 30 mcg ethinyl estradiol for 10 days. Diane 50 (Schering Ag) contains 2 mg cyproterone acetate and 50 mcg ethinyl estradiol for 21 days per cycle. 10 women in each group had physical, pelvic, ophthalmologic and neurologic exams, hematologic and biochemical screens, assays of free testosterone, sex hormone binding globulin (SHBG), androstenedione, dehydroepiandrosterone SO4 (DHEAS), progesterone, and computations of acne and hirsutism scores. Subjects had used tetracyclines, isotretinoin, erythromycin, topical clindamycin and benzoyl peroxide previously, but were withdrawn from medication in the cycle before the intervention. The mean acne scores, derived from grading and counting lesions and comedones, fell from 63.3 to 6 in the Diane 50 and from 64.2 to 4.5 in the
Triphasil
group. Subjective results were excellent for 6, good for 2 and unsatisfactory for 2 in the Diane 50 group, and excellent for 8 and good for 2 in the
Triphasil
group. In both groups mean free testosterone, androgen index, androstenedione and DHEAS, and an increase in SHBG were documented. 5
Triphasil
and 5 Diane 50 subjects had increased cholesterol levels during the trial, the only abnormality detected. Side effects reported were recurrence of varicose veins and hemorrhoids in 1 women who withdrew, and complaints of mastalgia,
nausea
, dysmenorrhea, migraine, headache, backache and vaginal discharge.
...
PMID:An open study of Triphasil and Diane 50 in the treatment of acne. 183 45
Triphasil
, a low-dose combination oral contraceptive containing levonorgestrel and ethinyl estradiol, was tested in four Planned Parenthood clinics on 317 women between 18 and 34 years of age (mean, 23) for a total of 4,692 cycles, or 361 woman-years of usage. Approximately half these volunteers (165) were nulligravidas, and 309 (97.5%) were white. Despite instructions on proper tablet usage, there were 416 cycles (8.9%) in which one or more tablets were missed. Only one pregnancy occurred, in a cycle in which a total of four tablets was missed, for an uncorrected Pearl index of 0.28 pregnancies per 100 woman-years of usage. No pregnancy resulted from method failure, indicating a 100% efficacy rate for
Triphasil
when taken properly. The mean length of the menstrual cycle with
Triphasil
was 27.9 days; the mean length of menses, 4.4 days; and the mean latency period, 2.1 days. Menstrual flow was average in 64.1% of the subjects, light in 34.1%, heavy in 1.3% and variable in 0.5%. Amenorrhea during the tablet-free interval occurred in only 0.6% of the 4,692 cycles in which
Triphasil
was used. Breakthrough bleeding occurred in 6.9% of first cycles and 3.2% of total cycles; spotting, in 10.7% of first cycles and 4.4% of total cycles. Other symptoms that occurred with an incidence of greater than or equal to 1% were acne (1.0%), appetite increase (1.2%), breast discomfort (2.8%), breast enlargement (1.3%), gastrointestinal symptoms (1.7%), simple headache (1.4%) and
nausea
(1.1%). A total of 44 women (13.9%) discontinued treatment for medical reasons.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Planned Parenthood experience with triphasil. 365 99
At this time 3 triphasics are widely used in the US: Ortho-Novum 7/7/7, Tri-Norinyl, and
Triphasil
. Ethinyl estradiol is the preferred estrogenic agent for the triphasic products. Torethindrone and levonorgestrel were chosen as the progestins for the triphasic products. It is the combined effects of estrogen and progestin in the triphasics that provide their contraceptive action.
Triphasil
increases both the estrogen and the progestin at midcycle; Tri-Norinyl and Ortho-Novum 7/7/7 elevate the progestin only. The midcycle surges of estrogen and luteinizing hormone are dampened, and ovulation is inhibited. The triphasics represent a 98.7% reduction in total steroid content since oral contraceptives (OCs) were introduced. An estrogen dose of 30-50 mcg will inhibit ovulation, and side effects with such a dose are considered tolerable. The triphasic OCs are in this range. An estrogen dose of 20 mcg has been tested but is slightly less effective and is not recommended. Contraceptive failures have occurred with the triphasic products. In 1486 women studied, 6 pregnancies have occurred. Of these failures, one may have been because of a drug interaction with a barbituate. 1 pregnancy was due to patient failure; 3 consecutive pills were missed. Only 2 pregnancies were certain drug failures. Because of the gentle suppression of ovarian function, it has been observed that the menstrual flow is less affected than by standard OCs. Due to the fact that less total steroid is delivered and more endometrial shedding occurs, it is hoped that the triphasic preparations will have less of a "lingering" effect on the return to functional fertility. Most of the published data on side effects is available from the UK, North America, and Europe on the formulation known in the US as
Triphasil
.
Nausea
, vomiting, breakthrough bleeding, weight gain, and breast tenderness appear to be the most common side effects. The major medical reasons for triphasic discontinuation include breast tenderness, weight gain, breakthrough bleeding, nausea and vomiting, headache, and increased bleeding during the 1 week of withdrawal. Rifampin and phenobarbital are examples of drugs found to decrease pill efficiency, including triphasics. Also, a triphasic may interfere with the action of another drug. The new triphasics are appropriate when starting new patients on OCs. Patient counseling is essential. Due to the low margin of error as a consequence of lesser suppression of ovarian function, the patient needs to be well instructed in how to take the pill and advised of the consequences of missed tables.
...
PMID:The triphasics: insights for effective clinical use. 382 67
This study was conducted to assess the efficacy of d-Norgestrel associated with Ethinylestradiol (
Neogynon 21
) as postcoital contraception and to report on the clinical experience obtained with this type of contraception. 323 women were treated during 72 h. period following unprotected intercourse. All subjects received 0,2 mg Ethinylestradiol and 1 mg d-Norgestrel (
Levonorgestrel
) in 2 equally divided doses 12 hours apart. - 1 mg
Levonorgestrel
was observed to be as effective as 2 mg of the racemic Norgestrel. PCC given during the first part of the cycle, shortened the latter in 80% of relevant cases.
Nausea
occurred in 30.3% of all patients; among these 14.2% also mentioned vomiting. Three pregnancies occurred of which only one could be attributed to method failure. The corrected failure rate is thus estimated at 0.3%.
...
PMID:[Post-coital contraception using a combination of d-norgestrel and ethinyloestradiol]. 403 32
Drug companies have been at work throughout the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s trying to reduce the steroid content of their oral contraceptives (OCs). Researchers have been successful in reducing steroid content while maintaining effectiveness, thereby making OCs safer. In the 1st half of the natural menstrual cycle, a woman secretes estrogen as the dominant steroid product. In the 2nd half, estrogen is the principal reproductive hormone. Estrogens inhibit ovulation, possibly by inhibiting implantation, altering ovum transplant, or in some way preventing corpus luteum function, which is necessary to maintain early pregnancies and the endometrium. There are still only 2 estrogens and 6 progestins on the market today. They are probably the most thoroughly studied chemical ever seen in the history of pharmacy or medicine. 1 of the estrogens, mestranol, is really a drug of the past. In the body, mestranol is converted to ethinyl estradiol, the other estrogen on the market. Consequently, there is no reason to use mestranol itself. Within the dose range of 50-100 mcg, there's little difference in contraceptive effect. Progestins are the other active ingredient in the combination OC. Their principal action is the thickening of the cervical mucus, which prevents sperm penetration. Also, with sufficient progesterone, ovulation is inhibited, but this happens in only 40% of those patients taking, for instance, the "mini-pill" (which consists of progesterone only). The progestins and the estrogens work in concert to make OCs a highly effective contraceptive method. Recent surveys conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and National Cancer Institute looked into the relative effectiveness of OCs.
Nordette
had a use effectiveness failure rate of 3.5; Ovral, 3.6. Loestrin 1/20 -- norethindrone acetate, 1 mg, and estinyl estradiol, 20 mcg -- shows a failure rate of 4.5. This indicates that the threshold for an effective dose of estinyl estradiol in OCs is 30 mcg. For 1 mini-pill,
Ovrette
, the failure rate is 9.5 -- much higher. Depo-Provera has a failure rate of 0.7. The primary complaint from women taking OCs is spotting and breakthrough bleeding during the cycle. 30-50% of women given OCs stop taking them within a year. OC side effects include
nausea
, fluid retention, breast tenderness, leukorrhea, hypomenorrhea, headaches, spotting around the face, hypertension, and visual changes. 1 of the risks of birth control pills may be cervical dysplasia -- changes in the cells of the cervix. The relative risk of cervical cancer with OCs after 5-9 years is approximately 1.8. Clinical cases of deep vein thrombosis number 1/1000 per year among nonusers of OCs. Among users, the rate is 3 times as high: 3/1000. The most serious potential adverse effect is myocardial infarction. Of the excess deaths attributed to OCs (23.3 total per 100,000 users), 22.7 are due to myocardial infarctions and hemorrhage. The discussion also briefly reviews other methods of contraception -- Depo-Provera, male contraceptives, implants, the diapragm, and IUDs.
...
PMID:Prescription contraceptives: countering the risks. 405 Jun 70
The efficacy, side effects, and biologic actions of the progestogen-only minipills marketed since February 1973 are reviewed. The preparations are: 350 mcg norethisterone (Micronor Ortho), 30 mcg d-norgestrel (Microlut Schering and
Microval
Wyeth), and 500 mcg lynestrenol (Exluton Organon). The efficacy of these drugs depends on motivation: Pearl indexes vary from 1.17-3.72 for norethisterone, .9-4.4 for d-norgestrel, and .8- 2.2 for lynestrenol. Some physiologic effects of minipills possibly related to their mode of action are impermeable cervical mucus and low levels of progesterone, pregnanediol, estrogen, and LH. The side effects influencing dropout most are spotting (40-55% in the first cycle), polymenorrhea (about 10%), and amenorrhea (about 5-10%). Some transient estrogenic side effects such as
nausea
, headaches, and breast pain may be due to estrogenic metabolites from lynestrenol and norethisterone. None of the severe estrogenic side effects, such as thrombophlebitis and impaired glucose tolerance and liver function, are characteristic of progestogen pills.
...
PMID:[Minipill as the new contraceptive method]. 481 42
Contraceptive vaginal rings (CVRs), with approximate daily release rates of 250-290 mcg of levonorgestrel and 150-180 mcg of estradiol and manufactured in a shell design, were studied for effectiveness and acceptability in multicentered trials involving 1103 ring users in Brazil, Chile, Dominican Republic, Sweden, U.S., Denmark/Finland, and Nigeria. A comparison group of 533 women used the oral contraceptive
Nordette
. Both 1st and all segment 1 year gross pregnancy rates among CVR users were less than 3/100, rates similar to
Nordette
users. Continuation at 1 year was 50/100 users of the ring (all segments) and 38/100 among
Nordette
users, more of whom were lost to follow-up. Gross 1 year rates of termination for medical reasons ranged from 25-29/100. Ring users were more likely to terminate for vaginal problems and pill users for headache,
nausea
, and associated reasons. These trials indicate that CVRs of this design are as effective and have continuation rates equal to and possibly superior to
Nordette
under the same study conditions.
...
PMID:A multicenter study of levonorgestrel-estradiol contraceptive vaginal rings. I-Use effectiveness. An international comparative trial. 645 8
Postcoital contraceptives are available for adolescent use in the US. They include combination oral contraceptives (OCs), high dose estrogens, danazol, and IUDs. Mifepristone (RU-486) is currently not available in the US but is used in France, the UK, and Sweden. Postcoital contraception is especially important for adolescents who have a very high pregnancy rate due to poor contraceptive use. Administration of 2-5 mg ethinyl estradiol (EE) for 5 days beginning within 72 hours of unprotected intercourse yields pregnancy rates ranging from 0-0.92%. EE-related side effects include
nausea
, vomiting, sore breasts, and irregular menstrual bleeding. DES should not be used, since it is associated with reproductive tract anomalies and vaginal cancers in exposed offspring. Conjugated estrogens have not been used in adolescents for postcoital contraception. The Yuzpe regimen consists of 2 tablets of a combined OC with 200 mg EE and 2 mg dl-norgestrel administered within 72 hours of unprotected intercourse followed by the same dose 12 hours later. Common side effects are nausea and vomiting. Its pregnancy rate is 1.8%.
Levonorgestrel
-containing OCs can also be used. Administration of 800-1200 mg danazol up to 120 hours after unprotected intercourse protects against pregnancy in about 98% of cases. Copper IUDs have a high efficacy rate when used as postcoital contraception (99.9%), but public opinion, medicolegal considerations, financial costs, and potential for infection impede IUD as a postcoital contraceptive in the US. RU-486 is best known as an abortifacient. It is also a potential postcoital contraceptive. Two UK studies find that RU-486 used as a postcoital contraceptive has a very low pregnancy rate and fewer side effects than the Yuzpe regimen and danazol. It is much more costly than currently used postcoital contraceptives (600 mg of RU-486 cost US$ 68, while Ovral costs US$ 0.48-2.24). Nevertheless, RU-486 may replace the higher doses of OCs as a postcoital contraceptive method.
...
PMID:Postcoital contraception: present and future options. 774 40
1
2
Next >>