29 research outputs found
Complementary Therapy in Polycystic Ovary Syndrome
Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS) is an endocrine disease. PCOS afflicts 5 to 10 % of women of reproductive age. The symptoms are: amenorrhea, oligomenorrhea, hirsutism, obesity, infertility, chronic hyperandrogenic anovulation and acne.
Other risk factors aggravate this condition: insulin resistance, obesity, hypertension, dyslipidemia, inflammation and subclinical cardiovascular disease.
Anxiety, depression and reduced quality of life are also common.
This review highlights the mechanisms and the beneficial effects of acupuncture, exercise and resveratrol on animal models and on humans affected by PCOS
YouTube™ as a Source of Information on Acupuncture for Correction of Breech Presentation
Background and Aim: Breech presentation is a condition that occurs in rare cases in pregnancy. Although guidelines recommend a cesarian section or an external cephalic version in case of breech, alternative procedures like acupuncture, are also available. Information on this approach is mostly found by patients through social media; we aimed to study content quality and the reliability of information present on YouTubeTM (Google LLC, Mountain View, California, United States), one of the most popular.Methods: Two gynecologists and an anesthesiologist, who was qualified as an acupuncturist, rated the reliability and the content quality of 23 of the first 100 results from YouTube. Normal data distribution was tested with the Shapiro-Wilk test. General features of videos, reliability, and content quality were compared with the Wilcoxon-Mann-Whitney test (continuous variables) and the Chi-square test (categorical variables). All tests were two-sided, and the statistical significance level was determined at p<0.05.Results: Concerning reliability, all videos were rated poorly while only one was judged as sufficiently high in quality content. Lower scores in terms of reliability and content quality resulted from the reviewers' evaluation with no videos reported as suggestable to patients. Two videos were considered fit to be suggested to patients by the gynecologist reviewers.Conclusions: Information about the role and the success rate of acupuncture for converting breech presentation found on YouTube are poorly reliable, low-quality, and not valid for patients. It should be a physician's duty to provide correct information to patients
Cardiotocography pattern: not always a true friend
: Fetal well-being in labor could be assessed trough cardiotocography (CTG). Some doubts have been raised about its unequivocal applicability. Pathological CTG is in most cases connected to fetal acidosis at birth, but other potential causes must be considered in the differential diagnosis. A 31-years-old G2P1 patient referred to our Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology for her scheduled post-term CTG at 40 weeks and 3 days of gestation. The pregnancy was uneventful. CTG was classified as suspicious, and after pharmacological induction, it switched as pathological: an emergency cesarean section was performed. Venous and arterial blood sample taken from the umbilical cord were normal. The next assessments revealed that Atrial Flutter (AFL) occurred at birth. Suspicious CTG is not always associated to neonatal asphyxia. Cardiotocography can help not only in the evaluation of fetal distress, but also in the assessment of global fetal cardiac activity. The presence of a fetal heart defect should be considered when CTG is suspicious
Stress-first single photon emission computed myocardial perfusion imaging
Background. Myocardial perfusion
imaging (MPI) with single photon emission
tomography (SPET) is widely used in coronary
artery disease evaluation. Recently major
dosimetric concerns have arisen. The aim of this
study was to evaluate if a pre-test scoring system
could predict the results of stress SPET MPI, thus
avoiding two radionuclide injections. Methods. All
consecutive patients (n=309) undergoing SPET
MPI during the first 6 months of 2014 constituted
the study group. The scoring system is based on
these characteristics: age >65 years (1 point),
diabetes (2 points), typical chest pain (2 points),
congestive heart failure (3 points), abnormal ECG
(4 points), male gender (4 points), and documented
previous CAD (5 points). The patients were
divided on the basis of the prediction score into 3
classes of risk for an abnormal stress-first
protocol. Results. An abnormal stress SPET MPI
was present in 7/31 patients (23%) with a low risk
score, in 24/90 (27%) with an intermediate score
risk, and in 124/188 (66%) with an high score risk.
ROC curve analysis showed good prediction of
abnormal stress MPI. Conclusions. Our results
suggest an appropriate use of a pre-test clinical
prediction formula of abnormal stress MPI in a
routine clinical setting
Endometrial Carcinoma and Bisphenol A:A Pilot Case-Control Study
Female cancers represent one of the major causes of morbidity and mortality in the adult population
Variations in sleep associated with different types of hormonal contraceptives
Progesterone and some of its metabolites are neuroactive steroids that affect sleep by increasing melatonin secretion and stimulating GABA-A receptors. The effect of progestogens in hormonal contraceptives on sleep has not been thoroughly investigated. This observational study assessed possible associations in sleep changes induced by estrogen-progestogens in contraceptives in 108 women between the ages of 20 and 50 years. We assessed mean nightly sleep time with a 31-day sleep diary, and subjective sleep quality with the five subjective subscores of the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI). Included women were of childbearing age, healthy, sexually active and had been using a hormonal contraceptive method (pill, intrauterine system (IUS), subcutaneous implant, vaginal ring) for at least six months. Results were compared to a matched control group that did not use hormonal contraceptives. The longest mean nightly sleep time, compared to control (450 min), occurred in women who used progestogen-only oral contraception (510 min), followed by IUS delivery of levonorgestrel 13.5 mg (480 min) and oral ethinylestradiol 0.02/0.03 mg plus gestodene 0.075 mg (475 min). Global subjective sleep quality was influenced most by the administration of etonorgestrel 0.120 mg/ethinylestradiol 0.015 mg via the vaginal route. Our results show that low-doses of progestins affect various aspects of sleep, and that this is influenced by the route of administration
Variations in sleep associated with different types of hormonal contraceptives.
Progesterone and some of its metabolites are neuroactive steroids that affect sleep by increasing melatonin secretion and stimulating GABA-A receptors. The effect of progestogens in hormonal contraceptives on sleep has not been thoroughly investigated. This observational study assessed possible associations in sleep changes induced by estrogen-progestogens in contraceptives in 108 women between the ages of 20 and 50 years. We assessed mean nightly sleep time with a 31-day sleep diary, and subjective sleep quality with the five subjective subscores of the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI). Included women were of childbearing age, healthy, sexually active and had been using a hormonal contraceptive method (pill, intrauterine system (IUS), subcutaneous implant, vaginal ring) for at least six months. Results were compared to a matched control group that did not use hormonal contraceptives. The longest mean nightly sleep time, compared to control (450 min), occurred in women who used progestogen-only oral contraception (510 min), followed by IUS delivery of levonorgestrel 13.5 mg (480 min) and oral ethinylestradiol 0.02/0.03 mg plus gestodene 0.075 mg (475 min). Global subjective sleep quality was influenced most by the administration of etonorgestrel 0.120 mg/ethinylestradiol 0.015 mg via the vaginal route. Our results show that low-doses of progestins affect various aspects of sleep, and that this is influenced by the route of administration
Is there a lesser value type of violence? Older people abuse: “The silence of the lambs”
The World Health Organization (WHO) describes gender violence as a real global health problem with a major impact not only on the victims' physical and mental health, but also on the economics of the National Health System. Gender-based violence has been also extended to all types of subjects defined as fragile: children, elderly, women, men and disabled people. Older people abuse, more frequent in women, is a far less socially debated issue, with many forms: physical, sexual, psychological, abandonment, neglect, economic-financial, pharma-ceutical, discriminatory, institutional. An electronic literature research was carried out search using the key-words "elderly abuse" on various online sources. The research showed low number of results and little attention to this topic in the scientific literature. The paper highlights how the theme of older people abuse is little reported and not adequately addressed in scientific literature and in real life, being a form of violence certainly under-estimated by the public
Menopausal Hormone Therapy, an Ever-Present Topic: A Pilot Survey about Women’s Experience and Medical Doctors’ Approach
Background and Objective: Menopause can be associated with many clinical manifestations: vasomotor symptoms, urogenital problems, and additional psychological disturbances, such as anxiety, mood changes, and sleep alterations. The prolonged lack of hormones also increases the risk of long-term consequences. Hormone Replacement Treatment (HRT) in menopause consists of the administration of estrogen, alone or associated to progesterone, to relieve these uncomfortable disturbances and to prevent the onset of other pathologic conditions. The aim of this study is to examine the prevalence of HRT use in a sample of menopausal women and their experience with menopause and HRT. This study also investigates the knowledge of general practitioners (GPs) and gynecologists about HRT and its prescription. Materials and Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional population survey on 126 women of 50-59 years in an industrial city in the North of Italy, Vercelli (Novara), in Eastern Piedmont. We also presented a questionnaire on the topic to 54 medical doctors (GPs and gynecologists) of the same area. Results: The prevalence of HRT use in our sample was 11.9%. In total, a good percentage of the users affirmed to be satisfied with HRT. Additionally, a minority of women reported being ideally against the use of replacement hormones, were advised against using HRT by doctors, and did not use it because of the fear of side effects. We found a positive association between patient education, health care attitude, and HRT usage. A significant number of women knew about HRT from the media, and most of them were not informed by a health professional. Despite this, the interviewed doctors considered their knowledge about HRT as 'good' and would recommend HRT: only 5.6% would not prescribe it. Conclusions: Our results highlight the need for information about HRT among patients and health professionals, along with the need for more effective communication, evaluation, and suggestion of treatment