Plasma concentrations of levonorgestrel were determined in women using subdermal levonorgestrel implants. One group had 6 Silastic capsules (NORPLANT), one group had 4 and one group had 6 covered Silastic rods for variable lengths of time. Levonorgestrel concentrations remained constant around 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe semen characteristics, before and after varicocelectomy, were studied in 220 husbands from infertile couples, whose wives had no significant abnormalities. All couples were followed for one year or until the wife became pregnant. Sperm density, vitality, motility and percent with normal morphology were analysed before surgery.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe copper IUD model T-Cu 380A has shown the best performance when compared with other copper and inert IUDs in studies carried out in the U.S.A.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStarting from the 10th day of the menstrual cycle through onset of the subsequent menstrual bleeding, daily blood samples were collected from 14 women using Copper T IUDs and 10 normal control women. The serum samples were analysed by radioimmunoassay (RIA) for human prolactin (hPRL) and human luteinizing hormone (hLH). hPRL values were subjected to statistics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effect on spermatogenesis of the implantation of six rods containing levonorgestrel and three estrone rods was studied in seven volunteers aged 32-40, with normal pre-treatment spermiogram. None of the subjects achieved azoospermia. The lowest sperm count was below 1 million/ml in three subjects and below 12 million/ml in the other four.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe association between mother's education and perinatal mortality, and between marital status and proportion of preterm deliveries was analyzed using data from 20,000 women and newborns delivered at the Hospital Barros Luco-Trudeau in Santiago, Chile. A highly significant correlation was found, but after being controlled by pre-natal care, that association disappeared for those mothers with good pre-natal care, remaining only as a part of the association for women who did not attend the pre-natal clinics or did not follow minimal standards of care. The definition used for "good pre-natal care" was much less demanding than WHO recommendation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPituitary-ovarian function was evaluated by measurement of daily serum levels of luteinizing hormone (LH), 17 beta-estradiol, and progesterone in women with a previous history of tubal ligation. Normally menstruating women served as controls. The duration of the proliferative and luteal phase was similar for both groups.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA study of the field acceptability of the Contraceptive Vaginal Ring (CVR) was carried out in rural, small town and urban slum clinics in four locations, two in Brazil and two in the Dominican Republic (D.R.) The CVR was offered as a new method in the clinics and described as similar to the pill but placed in the vagina for three weeks each month with a one-week rest interval.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTen healthy, normally menstruating women attending a family planning clinic in Santo Domingo Participated in a study to determine the effects on plasma lipid levels of levonorgestrel and estradiol released from a contraceptive ring. A schedule of 21 days of use followed by 7 days of non-use was followed for 6 cycles. During the first two cycles of use, concentrations of cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, triglycerides and LDL cholesterol declined significantly from control levels, up to 25% for cholesterol, 28% for HDL cholesterol, 45% for friglycerides and 24% for LDL cholesterol.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMenstrual events among users of contraceptive vaginal rings (CVRs), releasing levonorgestrel and estradiol, were studied in comparison with a combined oral contraceptive, Nordette, in multicentered trials. CVRs were made with outside diameters of 50 and 58 mm and released about 250 micrograms and 290 microgram of levonorgestrel and 150 microgram and 180 microgram of estradiol per day, respectively. The CVRs were used continuously for 3 weeks and then removed for 1 week.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFComparative clinical trials of 2 sizes of contraceptive vaginal rings and of an oral contraceptive were undertaken at 8 investigational sites (9 clinics). More than 500 women enrolled on each of the 3 study regimens. Side effects of the rings and of Nordette, the oral contraceptive, were evaluated by noting spontaneous complaints, by recording medications taken and by physical examination.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSperm migration to the upper genital tract was studied in 15 volunteers who were to be surgically sterilized to see if sperm migration to the upper genital tract is consistent during different stages of the menstrual cycle. Five subjects underwent surgery during the midproliferative phase, five during the periovulatory period and five during the secretory phase. The stage of the cycle was determined by endometrial and ovarian biopsy at the time of surgery.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe combination of an initial injection of 1000 mg of depot medroxyprogesterone acetate and 500 mg of testosterone enanthate, followed by monthly administration of 150 mg and 500 mg of the same drugs, was tested in 10 healthy males aged 28 through 39, with pre-treatment sperm counts of 50 x 10(6)/ml or more. Eight of the subjects achieved azoospermia, and the sperm counts of the other two declined 0.09 ad 5 million/ml.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe duration and hormonal characteristics of the menstrual cycles of women using Copper T intrauterine devices (IUDs) were studied. Daily load samples were obtained during both the pre- and postovulatory phases of 30 IUD-associated cycles and the hormone values were compared with those of 15 normally menstruating women not using contraception. The ovulation rate and peak levels of 17 beta-estradiol and luteinizing hormone (LH) were not significantly different between the two groups.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrevious clinical experience with six levonorgestrel subdermal capsules showed a very good contraceptive effectiveness and continuation rate, but with a high proportion of bleeding disturbances, particularly of increased bleeding. It was hypothesized that bleeding could be reduced by higher plasma levels of the steroid, using subdermal rods instead of capsules, as rods have been shown to have a release rate 3 or 4 times that of the capsules. Fifty volunteers were enrolled in a study of the clinical performance of 6 subdermal levonorgestrel rods.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA potential male contraceptive approach was evaluated in clinical trials involving monthly injections of depot medroxyprogesterone acetate and either subdermal implants of testosterone propionate or monthly injections of testosterone enanthate. Pregnancies occurred in partners of 9 men with recent sperm counts of 10 million/ml or below. In 5 of the 9 instances, the sperm counts were less than 1 million/ml.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFContraception
October 1978
The menstrual patterns of women using subdermal implants of levonorgestrel and norgestrienone included in a double-blind clinical trial was evaluated by the method developed by the International Committee on Contraception Research. Women using Copper T200 randomly selected in the same clinics were used as controls. Both implant regimens were associated with a high frequency of reduced bleeding and norgestrel patients had also a high proportion of increased and irregular bleeding.
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