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Query: UMLS:C0476089 (endometrial cancer)
11,379 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The gynecologic future of contraception can be predicted in 2 senses from the woman's viewpoint. 1st, postponing or avoiding pregnancy by any method predisposes women to fibroids, ovarian dystrophy, endometriosis, sterility, mastopathy, and breast and endometrial cancer. 2nd, pills and IUDs have inherent risks absent with the traditional methods. In the realm of gynecologic medicine, pills can facilitate growth of cancer, cause sterility and might be teratogenic. IUDs are not totally effective and can cause sterilizing infections. Giving an IUD to a nullipara or to any woman who wants more children is considered a scandalous practice. Looking toward the future from the gynecologists' viewpoint, many experience misgivings about performing abortions. Some dislike prescribing chemical or mechanical contraception, and object to being made responsible for deciding which potentially dangerous birth control procedure to prescribe to healthy patients for whom pregnancy is more therapeutic.
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PMID:[Contraception and the gynecologic future]. 102 43

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