Results 251 to 260 of about 45,504 (287)
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Ovulation Detection by Internal Cranial Temperature Measurements
IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering, 1965A simple method for recording a patient's internal cranial temperature is described. Using these measurements it is shown that the drop and rapid rise in basal temperature indicative of ovulation can be easily detected and recorded. The superiority of cranial temperature over oral temperature is demonstrated by indicating the occurrence of ovulation ...
A J, ADDUCCI +2 more
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The Detection of Ovulation by Intravaginal Telemetry
Fertility and Sterility, 1976Following ovulatory control cycles in four celibate, healthy women, 27 to 34 years of age, basal body temperatures (BBT) were obtained in three cycles, utilizing a transistorized transvaginal telemeter. The electronic signals were collected on an automatically activated cassette receiver and later translated into temperature readings.
J H, Mattox, R J, Luby, M, Kline
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Ovulation Detection in Saliva, Is It Possible
Gynecologic and Obstetric Investigation, 2013<b><i>Background/Aims:</i></b> The new mini-microscope Geratherm® ovu control was evaluated for its recognition of saliva ferning in a collective of 47 patients taking part in an artificial reproductive technology program on the day of follicular puncture. <b><i>Methods:</i></b> The ferning phenomenon was
A, Salmassi +5 more
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Ovulation: Stimulation, Suppression, Detection
JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1967This is a timely book. For the majority of the physicians, it fills a void which has resulted from the rapid recent advances in this field. The book consists of the contributions of 36 international and national authorities in the field of gynecologic endocrinology. It has a meaningful foreword by Bernard Zondek and a beautiful and fitting epilogue by
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Cervicovaginal fluid changes to detect ovulation accurately
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 2005The purpose of this study was to evaluate changes in cervicovaginal fluid characteristics to identify ovulation.Several ovulation indicators were studied in a university-based natural family planning center. Fifteen parous women during 29 ovulatory cycles detected cervicovaginal fluid at the vulva.
María Elena, Alliende +3 more
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Ovulation Detection by Monitoring Temperature During Sleep
IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering, 1983It is demonstrated that the temperature rise associated with ovulation in women can be detected by monitoring the body temperature noninvasively throughout the night. Digital recordings of the temperature were taken every 6 min during sleeping hours. It took 2-3 h for the temperature to rise and stabilize.
Z A, Weinberg, S A, Cohen
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Ovulation detection and artificial insemination
American Journal of Primatology, 1982Methods of detecting ovulation and conducting artificial insemination in great apes are reviewed and described. Ovulation time can be detected to some extent by measuring timing relative to such cyclic correlates as menstruation, perineal swelling, body temperature, viscosity of cervical mucus, and behavior (copulation, masturbation, aggressivity). The
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A prototype for ovulation detection: Pros and cons
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 1991A noninstrumented enzyme immunoassay for urinary estrone conjugates was adapted from an instrumented microtiter plate enzyme immunoassay assay. The end point of the assay was a color change from green to clear, which was visible to the unaided eye. The visible color change was adjusted to allow 80 ng/ml estrone conjugates (on the basis of a sample size
B L, Lasley, S E, Shideler, C J, Munro
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Evaluation of the accuracy of the home ovulation detection kit, Clearplan, at predicting ovulation
Medical Journal of Australia, 1990A home ovulation testing kit, Clearplan, that detects the urinary luteinizing hormone (LH) surge was compared with basal body temperature (BBT) charts and cervical scoring as a method of ovulation prediction in 54 consecutive patients. The accuracy of all these methods was evaluated using daily serum LH measurements.
K, Gudgeon, L, Leader, B, Howard
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DETECTION AND DIAGNOSIS OF OVULATION
Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology, 1967The detection and diagnosis of ovulation remains retrospective and vague. No single test can be relied upon to define precisely the exact occurrence of ovulation. Rather a battery of indirect tests must be utilized for this purpose. At present the most reliable and practicable tests are basal body temperature endometrial biopsy urinary pregnanediol ...
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