Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0598853 (forgetting)
3,232 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The study is based on data from the 1978 Manawatu Family Growth Study concerning use, user satisfaction, and experience of side effects and fears among oral contraceptive (OC) users. 1085 (78%) of the 1390 women aged 16-44 interviewed had ever used OCs, 411 were current users. The proportion ever using OCs varied by age from 48.3% of women 16-19 to around 90% for those 25-34, 75.9% of current and 43.3% of former users were aged 16-29. 21.5% of previous users discontinued to become pregnant, and 65.6% switched to another method. 45.2% of current users admitted to sometimes forgetting to take the pill. 50% reported they were not entirely happy with the pill, with dissatisfaction lowest among current users aged 16-19 and 35-39 and greatest among those 25-34. Substantial proportions of dissatisfied current users and of previous users reported various side effects, among which swelling or weight gain, dizziness, headache, or feeling weak were among the most common; nausea, bleeding, and changes in skin or hair were reported also by many. Fears of permanent damage to their health were reported by over 1/2 of dissatisfied current users and of previous users, and 46.9% of ever users reported that publicity about possible side effects had caused them concern. Subgroup variation was found in use and experience, as illustrated by greater incidence among Maori women of both forgetting and satisfaction among current users. Study findings suggest a need for instruction, guidance, and counseling for OC users.
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PMID:The oral contraceptive pill: use, user satisfaction, side effects and fears among Manawatu women. 695 20

91 patients with trichinosis were treated at the Clinic of Infectious and Dermatovenereology Diseases in Novi Sad during a one-year period. In 64% of patients the onset was intestinal, while in 36% it was invasive. Diarrhea (in 28.89%) and abdominal pain (in 22.22%) are the most common symptoms of the intestinal stage. Nausea, vomiting and opstipation are less common. The main symptoms of the invasive stage are myalgia (65.54%), high temperature and eyelid edema (57.78%). Facial edema (38.89%), general weakness (24.44%), conjunctivitis (15.56%) and rash (8.89%) are somewhat less common. Heavy sweating, headache, nervousness, psychic instability and fast forgetting occur in a small number of treated patients. Myocarditis and encephalitis occurred in 3.33% of patients. There were 43.33% of patients with mild clinical picture, 40% with mild-to-severe and 16.66% with severe clinical picture. 54.44% of patients were males and 45.56% were females, and it can be said that sex did not influence the severeness of the clinical picture. The youngest patient was 5 years of age, the oldest 72. Most patients were 21-50 years of age but we did not establish statistical importance between clinical picture severeness in regard to age. The shortest period of incubation was 5 days, the longest 40 days. Average incubation period was 18.05 days (x = 18.05). Studying period of incubation and severeness of the clinical picture we established the following (x2 = 28.535). The shorter the incubation period, the severer the disease.
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PMID:[Clinical characteristics of trichinosis]. 901 31

Conversion disorder (CD) is a condition where neurological symptoms, such as weakness or sensory disturbance, are unexplained by neurological disease and are presumed to be of psychological origin. Contemporary theories of the disorder generally propose dysfunctional frontal control of the motor or sensory systems. Classical (Freudian) psychodynamic theory holds that the memory of stressful life events is repressed. Little is known about the frontal (executive) function of these patients, or indeed their general neuropsychological profile, and psychodynamic theories have been largely untested. This study aimed to investigate neuropsychological functioning in patients with CD, focusing on executive and memory function. A directed forgetting task (DFT) using words with variable emotional valence was also used to investigate memory suppression. 21 patients and 36 healthy controls completed a battery of neuropsychological tests and patients had deficits in executive function and auditory-verbal (but not autobiographical) memory. The executive deficits were largely driven by differences in IQ, anxiety and mood between the groups. A subgroup of 11 patients and 28 controls completed the DFT and whilst patients recalled fewer words overall than controls, there were no significant effects of directed forgetting or valence. This study provides some limited support for deficits in executive, and to a lesser degree, memory function in patients with CD, but did not find evidence of altered memory suppression to support the psychodynamic theory of repression.
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PMID:Neuropsychological function and memory suppression in conversion disorder. 2358 98