Results 251 to 260 of about 59,297 (307)
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Amenorrhea

Obstetrics and Gynecology Clinics of North America, 1990
Amenorrhea, the lack of menstruation, is a gynecologic disorder that may arise from a variety of causes. If a logical and orderly schema is followed, the correct diagnosis and appropriate management plan can be formulated.
K M, Doody, B R, Carr
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AMENORRHEA AND GALACTORRHEA

Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey, 1965
Abstract Sixteen patients with syndromes of amenorrhea and galactorrhea are reported. Those without pituitary tumors were classified as having the Chiari-Frommel syndrome if the onset of their symptoms was puerperal, or the del Castillo syndrome if onset was nonpuerperal.
Roger D. Kempers, James P. Thompson
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Athletic Amenorrhea

Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology, 1985
Secondary amenorrhea in athletes is reviewed with respect to its incidence, treatment, associated characteristics, proposed mechanisms, and endocrine profile. Athletic amenorrhea is classified within the general category of chronic anovulation syndrome, but no mechanism has been demonstrated.
Anne B. Loucks, Steven M. Horvath
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Amenorrhea

1981
Some aspects of the pathogenesis, diagnosis and treatment of amenorrhea are presented. Careful clinical examination is still of great importance. Hormone analysis and sophisticated functional tests, although they permit precise localization of the dysfunction, are usually dispensable for practical purposes.
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Amenorrhea and edema

The American Journal of Medicine, 1978
In a 22 year old woman extensive edema developed during evaluation for amenorrhea. It was learned then that she was consuming escessive amounts of a laxative daily. Balance studies were performed which demonstrated that she excreted large amounts of sodium in her liquid stools while taking the dose of laxative she had been using.
German Lizarralde, Irma H. Ullrich
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Prolactin and Amenorrhea

New England Journal of Medicine, 1976
Several reports indicate that raised serum prolactin concentrations occur in 15 to 20 per cent of women with amenorrhea1 , 2 and that when the prolactin levels are reduced, normal ovulation cycles and fertility return.3 , 4 Successful management of these cases depends on reliable identification of hyperprolactinemic amenorrhea and accurate diagnosis of
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THIORIDAZINE AND AMENORRHEA

American Journal of Psychiatry, 1963
chlorpromazine. She had been hospitalized elsewhere for several weeks, and had received 800 mg. of chiorpromazine per day for some time previous to transfer. Several hours after admission, she had an acute dystonic reaction involving the head, neck, and eye muscles, relieved by I.V. Benadryl.
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Amenorrhea Associated with Carotenemia

Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey, 1983
Data are presented for ten women with anovulation, nine of them with amenorrhea, who have associated carotenemia. Classic explanations for carotenemia in amenorrheic patients have been weight loss or anorexia nervosa, yet carotenemia in our patients appeared to be diet induced. All patients consumed a pure or predominantly vegetarian diet; there was no
Robert Skaf   +2 more
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Lactational Amenorrhea

Endocrinology and Metabolism Clinics of North America, 1993
There is no doubt that suckling can cause a substantial delay in the resumption of fertility postpartum in all societies regardless of nutritional status. The variability in duration of infertility is directly related to the different patterns of suckling, an uncontrollable variable specific to the mother and child.
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Athletes With Amenorrhea

The Physician and Sportsmedicine, 1993
(1993). Athletes With Amenorrhea. The Physician and Sportsmedicine: Vol. 21, No. 4, pp. 45-48.
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