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This is a comprehensive review of the risk of infertility or adverse effects on pregnancy outcome, such as chromosomal or congenital birth defects, amenorrhea, pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), or spontaneous abortion, after use of oral contraceptives, IUDs, induced abortion or spermicides. The sequelae reported for orals are chromosomal abnormalities, the VACTERL anomalies, masculinization of female fetus, Down's syndrome and post-pill amenorrhea. Several large studies found no increased risks for birth defects, although the risk of malformations when pregnant women inadvertently take the pill in early pregnancy was high in 1 of 2 such studies. Masculinization was reported with high dose combined hormone treatment and in 2 infants of a woman who took Enovid. the bulk of recent studies on secondary amenorrhea indicate that it is rare, but just as likely to occur in women with prior normal or abnormal menstrual patterns. One study found that amenorrhea is 7.7 times more likely to develop in women who took the pill to regulate menses. It is recommended that women with amenorrhea be screened for pituitary tumors and counseled before prescribing pills, and that those who fail to ovulate after stopping the pill be treated at least 6 months with clomiphene. A massing of all studies on the impact of 1st trimester induced abortion on subsequent fertility, premature delivery and spontaneous abortion, shows all relative risks around 1.0. After multiple abortions, the results are conflicting. In contrast, prior series analyzing illegal abortion have an unquestioned adverse effect on fertility and pregnancy outcome. Asherman's syndrome, a rare disorder of intrauterine adhesions, menstrual abnormalities, infertility and habitual abortion, has been associated with D & C abortion concurrent with pelvic sepsis, or traumatic pregnancy with D & C. This condition can be treated with moderate success. The bulk of IUD studies conclude that there is no overall decrement in fertility, while some disaggregated studies point the Dalkon shield as a higher risk and copper IUDs as a lower risk. PID and its consequences are now considered related to the immediate post-insertion time frame, or specifically to women who are at risk of contracting sexually transmitted disease, i.e., those with multiple partners, those with prior PID and nulliparas. Comprehensive review of current large series on spermicides shows no relationship between their use and spontaneous abortion or congenital malformation.
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PMID:Fertility after contraception or abortion. 220 74

From July 1981 to July 1985, 20 patients with bulky mediastinal Hodgkin's Disease (maximum mediastinal width divided by the maximum intrathoracic diameter for a mediastinal mass ratio (MMR) greater than 0.33 were treated at Stanford University with definitive radiation therapy alone. The majority of these patients were selected to receive radiation therapy because they had the more favorable characteristics of minimal extralymphatic involvement, mediastinal masses that were superior and central in location, and a MMR less than or equal to 0.50. All 20 patients were laparotomy staged, and 17 received some radiation to the mantle before laparotomy. Seventeen patients had pathologic stage (PS) II disease (13 PS IIA, 4 PS IIB), two had PS IIISA, and one had PS IB. Eleven patients (55%) had extralymphatic involvement. All patients were irradiated to the mantle field using a shrinking field technique (mediastinal dose, 4400 to 5500 cGy, mean 4990 cGy). After completion of the mantle, all patients with good clinical responses received infradiaphragmatic radiation. Treatment complications included two cases of mild radiation pneumonitis, five of hypothyroidism, five of localized Herpes zoster, one of amenorrhea, one of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, and one of sepsis. Four patients relapsed. All had an intrathoracic component to their failure. All four patients were salvaged with MOP(P) chemotherapy and are currently alive and free of disease. For the entire group, the actuarial freedom from relapse is 80% at 7 years and the survival is 100%. Median follow-up time is 67 months. The authors conclude that radiation therapy alone is effective in the management of selected patients with Hodgkin's disease who have extensive mediastinal involvement, even when the MMR exceeds 1/3.
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PMID:Radiation therapy in the management of bulky mediastinal Hodgkin's disease. 235 12

Two cases of pituitary abscesses are reported. The first case was a 22-year-old female who was admitted with 14 months history of intermittent fever and headache followed by amenorrhea and polyuria. Plain craniograms showed no remarkable changes on the sella turcica. Direct coronal CT demonstrated a cystic lesion with a ring-like enhanced capsule in the pituitary complex with the apparent bulging of the pituitary top surface. On dynamic CT, the cystic lesion showed no remarkable increase in density. Transsphenoidal surgery was performed and a purulent materials was drained by cutting the underlying fibrous pituitary tissue. Pathological specimen revealed a marked inflammatory reaction around the degenerative pituitary gland. The second case was a 27-year-old female who underwent transsphenoidal excision of craniopharyngioma on May 12, 1983. Postoperatively she did well with the hormonal replacement therapy until 9 months after surgery when a follow up direct coronal CT revealed a cystic lesion with ring-like enhancement in the pituitary fossa. Purulent material was found at transsphenoidal surgery. Pathological specimen from the hard capsule was a chronic inflammatory fibrous tissue without tumorous component. Over seventy cases of pituitary abscesses have been reported previously, but the majority of them were secondary infections associated with systemic sepsis, chronic sphenoid sinusitis or pituitary tumors. Primary pituitary abscesses were rare and would be difficult to be diagnosed preoperatively without an aid of recent CT technology. Thirty cases in the literature since 1970 are reviewed and its clinical pictures and radiological findings are discussed.
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PMID:[Pituitary abscess: report of two cases and a review]. 380

Fifty-four children and adolescents with Hodgkin's disease Stages I--IV were treated with chemotherapy plus radiotherapy from 1967 to 1972. Thirty-eight patients (70%) remain in continuous complete remission. Nine patients have died, four of progressive disease, three of pneumonitis, one with probable pneumococcal sepsis, and one of acute myelocytic leukemia. Significant retardation of height and crown-rump length occurred, particularly in boys who received at least mantle or abdominal radiotherapy when younger than age 16 years. Five women have amenorrhea and no patient has clinical evidence of hypothyroidism. The major long-term effects of therapy in this group of patients has been growth retardation. Future studies to minimize long-term effects of therapy are necessary but must be carefully designed so that present cure rates are not jeopardized.
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PMID:Long-term results of treatment of children and adolescents with Hodgkin's disease. 742 56

Two previously healthy women, aged 30 and 35 years, suffered pain in the lower abdomen, one before and the other after spontaneous delivery at 40 and 33 4/7 weeks of amenorrhoea, respectively, while a third woman, aged 33, at 36 weeks of amenorrhoea developed pain in the lower abdomen, fever, vomiting, and diarrhoea. All three women were found to have a uterine infection caused by streptococci of Lancefield group A (group A Streptococcus, GAS). In one woman, the diagnosis was made rapidly so that antibiotic treatment could be instituted in time; the other two developed sepsis and multiorgan failure, with a fatal issue in one of them. The three children also were septic, two recovered after treatment and one died. Since the eighties, serious GAS infection has been on the increase. The worst manifestation is the toxic shock syndrome caused by streptococci. Abdominal pains after delivery may be a first sign of this, and should not too readily be interpreted as just after pains. The condition may also develop before delivery. In view of the high mortality rate, early diagnosis and antibiotic treatment are of vital importance for mother and child.
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PMID:[Puerperal fever: an old enemy in aggressive form]. 954 40

Data on maternal morbidity make it possible to assess how many women are likely to need essential obstetric care, and permit the organization, monitoring and evaluation of safe motherhood programmes. In the present paper we propose operational definitions of severe maternal morbidity and report the frequency of such morbidity as revealed in a population-based survey of a cohort of 20,326 pregnant women in six West African countries. The methodology and questionnaires were the same in all areas. Each pregnant woman had four contacts with the obstetric survey team: at inclusion, between 32 and 36 weeks of amenorrhoea, during delivery and 60 days postpartum. Direct obstetric causes of severe morbidity were observed in 1215 women (6.17 cases per 100 live births). This ratio varied significantly between areas, from 3.01% in Bamako to 9.05% in Saint-Louis. The main direct causes of severe maternal morbidity were: haemorrhage (3.05 per 100 live births); obstructed labour (2.05 per 100), 23 cases of which involved uterine rupture (0.12 per 100); hypertensive disorders of pregnancy (0.64 per 100), 38 cases of which involved eclampsia (0.19 per 100); and sepsis (0.09 per 100). Other direct obstetric causes accounted for 12.2% of cases. Case fatality rates were very high for sepsis (33.3%), uterine rupture (30.4%) and eclampsia (18.4%); those for haemorrhage varied from 1.9% for antepartum or peripartum haemorrhage to 3.7% for abruptio placentae. Thus at least 3-9% of pregnant women required essential obstetric care. The high case fatality rates of several complications reflected a poor quality of obstetric care.
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PMID:Severe maternal morbidity from direct obstetric causes in West Africa: incidence and case fatality rates. 1085 53

The aim of this paper is retrospective analysis of data from patients in whom the indication for cyclophosphamide (CF) pulse therapy was established in our department. Indications for CF pulse treatment were lupus nephritis (LN) alone or associated with central nervous system lupus. CF was administred in the dose of 500-1000 mg/m2 intravenously once monthly for the 6 months and once every 3 months thereafter. Patients were treated with adequate dose of glucocorticoids and other symptomatic therapy. The effect of applied therapy has been analysed by monitoring proteinuria, serum creatinine concentration, creatinine clearance, ESR, ANF titer and total complement hemolytic activity. Initial therapeutic procedure has been completed in 25/30 patients. The reasons for discontinuation in 5/30 patients were as follows: end-stage renal failure in spite of therapy (1), psychosis and lost of compliance (1), recurrent pancytopenia and subsequent sepsis (1), death non related to SLE (1) and failure to show at follow-up (1). Significant improvement of all control parameters was observed in the majority of patients in whom the therapy was completely conducted. 16/25 patients continued therapy for the next 18 months and in only 1/16 patients therapy was discontinued because of end-stage renal failure. In other 15/16 patients further improvement of control parameters was observed, although not so expressed as in the first 6 months. The most frequent complications were infections (16 infections were microbiologically proved and there were probably more infections). Alopecia (2), haematuria (1) and amenorrhoea (1) were also observed. Relatively low incidence of complications may be explained by careful patient monitoring. Considering that therapeutic success is defined not only by the improvement of renal function, but by stopping of further progression of renal failure, it can be concluded that intermittent CF pulse therapy showed good effect on LN in patients with clear indication.
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PMID:[Intermittent intravenous cyclophosphamide application in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus]. 1965 69

Hyper-immunoglobulin E recurrent infection syndromes (HIES) have distinct features, with identified associated mutations of STAT3, TYK2, and DOCK8. Among 197 Taiwanese patients with primary immunodeficiency on a referral-base of over 23 million inhabitants, STAT3 (R382W and Q469R) and DOCK8 mutations (exon 1-9 deletion) were identified in two patients each from six AD-HIES and five AR-HIES patients, respectively. Aside from decreased Th17 and memory B cells, characteristic facies and pneumatocele were not mutually exclusive regardless of STAT3 and DOCK8 mutations. One with novel DOCK8 deletion had notable cytomegalovirus retinitis, cerebral vasculitis, lead deposition, and amenorrhea. In adolescence, three AD-HIES patients without STAT3 mutation died of myocardial infarction, staphylococcus sepsis, and proteus sepsis while receiving chemotherapy for lymphoma. Close follow-up of the HIES phenotype rather than identifying genetic mutations should be the cornerstone of intervention at this juncture because of relatively lower percentage of identifying mutations in Taiwanese HIES (4/11; 36.5%).
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PMID:Clinical, immunological and genetic features in Taiwanese patients with the phenotype of hyper-immunoglobulin E recurrent infection syndromes (HIES). 2132 46

Objective. Imperforate hymen represents the extreme in the spectrum of hymenal embryological variations. The archetypal presentation in the adolescent patient is that of cyclical abdominopelvic pain in the presence of amenorrhoea. We reported a rare event of imperforate hymen presenting as a cause of tuboovarian abscess (TOA). Case Study. A 14-year-old girl presented to the emergency department complaining of severe left iliac fossa pain. It was her first episode of heavy bleeding per vagina, and she had a history of cyclical pelvic pain. She was clinically unwell, and an external genital examination demonstrated a partially perforated hymen. A transabdominal ultrasound showed grossly dilated serpiginous fallopian tubes. The upper part of the vagina was filled with homogeneous echogenic substance. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) demonstrated complex right adnexa mass with bilateral pyo-haemato-salpinges, haematometra, and haematocolpos. In theatre, the imperforate hymen was opened via cruciate incision and blood was drained from the vagina. At laparoscopy, dense purulent material was evacuated prior to an incision and drainage of the persistent right TOA. Conclusion. Ideally identification of imperforate hymen should occur during neonatal examination to prevent symptomatic presentation. Our case highlights the risks of late recognition resulting in the development of sepsis and TOA.
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PMID:Tuboovarian abscess as primary presentation for imperforate hymen. 2482 39