CONTRACEPTION
CONTRACEPTION
CONTRACEPTION
CONTRACEPTION
PREGNANT WOMAN
PREMENSTRUAL SYNDROME( PMS)
MENOPAUSE ( M)
Contraception
The discovery of estrogen and progesterone and their potential
contraceptive effects stimulated research on the regulation of
fertility in women.
The effectiveness and safety of OC agents in controlling ovulation
and fertility are a result of these efforts.
Consequently, most research and application of fertility control
techniques continue to be directed toward the control of female
fertility, and there is no readily reversible and effective
pharmacologic contraceptitve for men.
The practice of C.is as old as human existence.
Today, the voluntary control of fertility is of paramount importance
to modern society. From a global perspective, countries currently
face the crisis of rapid population growth that has begun to
threaten human survival.
At the present rate, the
population of the world
will double in 40 years in
several of the more
socioeconomically
disadvantaged countries,
populations will double
in less than 20 years
CONTRACEPTION
HORMONAL CONTRACEPTION
NONHORMONAL CONTRACEPTION
Healthy diet that is low in fat, salt, and sugar but more
moderate in proteins and complex carbohydrates ( whole
grains, vegetables, and fruit) is most beneficial to the patient
with PMS.
Prostaglandin PGE1 may be low in some women with PMS,
particularly those women whose symptoms are associated with
alterations in carbohydrate metabolism.
Prostaglandins also contribute to dysmenorrheal; thus an
inhibitor such as a nonsteroidal anti- inflammatory drug can be
beneficial.
MENOPAUSE (M)
M is permanent cessation of menstruation resulting from the loss of
ovarian follicular activity. Natural M is defined as 12 months of
amenorrhea without another pathologic cause. The average age at which
this occurs is 51,4 years. M before age 40 is called premature ovarian
failure.
Perimenopause is the period immediately prior to M and the first year
after M. The average age that perimenopause starts is the 47,5 years
and it lasts on average 4 years.
The climacteric is the phase during the aging of women marking the
transition from the reproductive to the non- reproductive state. This time
period includes events such as decreased fertility that precedes
perimenopause and extend beyond M.
MENOPAUSE (M)
M is due to a gradual depletion of functioning ovarian follicles.
Declining inhibin levels from the granulose cells lead to increased
FSH production from the pituitary that accelerates the follicular
phase of the menstrual cycle.
High basal estradiol levels during menses can be seen, often in
association with follicular cysts.
As the granulosa cells gradually lose their ability to produce
estradiol, FSH levels rise ( as do LH levels, to a lesser extent).
After M, androgen levels decline by 50%, but the greater decline
of estradiol favors a higher androgen- to- estrogen ratio, leading to
signs of hirsutism and alopecia in some women.
Estrogen production after M is principally estrone produced by
aromatazation of androstendione in adipose tissues.
MENOPAUSE (M)