Archive for the ‘meds’ Category

Reasons For Late Menstrual Periods

Saturday, March 7th, 2009

Do you get your periods regularly? Having a regular menstrual cycle is a sign of good health but it can be quite complicated if you have fluctuating hormones and late or missed periods.

When your menstrual cycle is regular, it means that it is exactly the same length all the time. On the other hand, irregular or late periods mean that the cycle can vary by days in length.

If you have irregular or late menstrual periods, you are likely to frequently question why you have late periods.

In order to clarify the doubts in your mind, here are a few of the most common reasons for late periods:

1. Extreme stress: Emotional and physical stress can contribute equally to late or irregular periods. If you’ve experienced a lot of physical and emotional stress, you will probably experience a change in your menstrual cycle.
2. Overweight: If you are carrying more body pounds than required, your period may be delayed or irregular.
3. Prescribed medications: Certain prescribed medications including birth control pills can affect your menstrual cycle.
4. Pregnancy: Depending on your age and recent sexual intercourse, your period will be late if you are pregnant. This is the first thing to consider if your period is late.
5. Chronic illness: If you have chronic illness or have been sick for an extended period, your periods can be temporarily delayed for a few days.

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Reasons Behind Irregular Periods

Thursday, March 5th, 2009

If you are suffering with irregular periods, it clearly indicates that your menstrual cycle has lost its balance. Actually, most irregular periods are benign and don’t cause any complications for your health.

Too frequent periods, missed periods, spotting or bouts of heavy clotting and bleeding usually occur because of underlying hormonal imbalance in your body and this hormonal imbalance can be treated easily.

In early stages of menstrual cycle, it may take several years for the hormones to control the changes in your body and to reach a balance in your regular menstrual cycle.

You can also experience irregular menstrual periods even at the end of your menstrual cycle. So, irregular periods at these particular stages of your life are not at all a cause of concern for you.

Pregnancy is also one of the major causes of missed or irregular period. Other than this, certain other reasons that can make you to experience irregular periods mainly include:

1. Significant weight gain or weight loss is one of the reasons for irregular periods. Even though low body weight is the most common cause of irregular periods, obesity also causes various interruptions in your regular menstrual cycle.
2. If you are a victim of severe emotional stress, then you can possibly experience irregular or missed periods. This is due to the reason that stress will have very serious impact on your reproductive health. So, if at all you experience severe emotional stress, you can obviously suffer with irregular periods.
3. Various eating disorders such as anorexia or bulimia can also have influence on your regular menstrual cycle. So, if you have any kind of eating disorder, you can certainly experience irregular periods.
4. Excessive exercising or straining your body also leads to irregular menstrual cycle. This is the reason why most of athletes encounter missed periods.
5. Many new mothers do not resume their regular periods until they have completed their breast feeding. So, they can possibly have irregular menstrual cycle.
6. Consuming excessive alcohol can also disturb your hormonal metabolism. As a result, you’ll certainly end up with irregular or missed periods.
7. Certain uterine abnormalities such as cervical polyps, uterine fibroids and endometriosis also lead to irregular periods.

These are only few reasons for experiencing irregular periods. So, if you are really concerned about your missed periods, immediately consult any experienced gynecologist and find out the main root cause of it.

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Is It Possible To Control Irregular Bleeding?

Wednesday, March 4th, 2009

Dysfunctional uterine bleeding is usually painless and it doesn’t cause any problem unless you become upset with your irregular bleeding. It can be easily treated with medicines or hormonal therapy.

Actually, your age, the cause of the condition and your future plans to conceive can have major impact on your treatment options.

If you are teen, you can expect your normal menstrual cycle, when your body matures. You can choose to wait until the imbalance of hormones in your body becomes normal on its own.

But, if your irregular bleeding is disrupting your normal menstrual cycle severely, your doctor will prescribe progestin or other hormone supplements to stop your irregular bleeding.

If you are not ovulating regularly and if you have no future child bearing plans, your doctor would recommend hysterectomy or endometrial ablation to stop your irregular bleeding.

So, talk to your doctor about your future pregnancy plans and go for right treatment option for your irregular periods.

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How Can You Know That It Is Dysfunctional Uterine Bleeding?

Tuesday, March 3rd, 2009

When you have dysfunctional uterine bleeding, you can experience one or more of these particular conditions:

1. If you are getting your periods more often than every 21 days or farther apart than 35days, probably you might be suffering with dysfunctional uterine bleeding.
2. Actually, the duration of normal menstrual cycle is between 4 to 6 days. But, if you are experiencing uterine bleeding more than 7 days every month, then it surely indicates that you have dysfunctional uterine bleeding.
3. Even if you’re experiencing heavy bleeding than normal or if you are passing blood clots and soaking through your usually sanitary pads, then you might probably have imbalance in your body hormones, which are responsible for regular periods.

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How To Recognize Dysfunctional Uterine Bleeding?

Monday, March 2nd, 2009

Do you get your periods more often than every 21 days? Possibly your period can last longer than 7 days. This kind of irregular bleeding is mainly referred as dysfunctional uterine bleeding.

It is not serious, but it can be annoying and disturb your life. In most cases, dysfunctional uterine bleeding is linked with hormonal changes in your body.

Dysfunctional uterine bleeding can be easily managed with medicine or with hormonal therapy to reduce bleeding.

It can be used either to stop or regulate your irregular menstrual cycle. Surgical treatment is mainly reserved for bleeding that can’t be reduced with hormonal therapy or medicines.

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The Joy of Sex

Thursday, February 26th, 2009

Sex education through the years!

Sex education is always a topic which stirs emotions. People have such differing views on who should teach it, and how. Schools are criticised for giving too much information and too little. Sometimes it can seem like a no-win situation.

But, it seems that it was ever thus. Sex education videos (and accompanying controversy) have been around for decades, and now the British Film Institute have released a box set of some classics, entitling them The Joy of Sex Education.

The notes accompanying the set, of 16 films, reveal that formal sex education emerged in Britain with the growth of the public school system in the mid-nineteenth century. There was concern about venereal disease, which was reaching “epidemic proportions” in the 1910s.

What the films clearly show is changing times, and a decline in the use of euphemism. This may well be fortunate. If you look at 1932’s Mystery of Marriage it purports to teach you about the “attraction of the species”. These include mould, spiders, pollinating bumblebees and even people!

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In The No: Virginity Pledges

Wednesday, February 18th, 2009

Teenagers who pledge to remain virgins until marriage are just as likely to have premarital sex as those who do not promise abstinence.

These “pledgers” are also significantly less likely to use condoms and other forms of birth control when they have premarital sex, reports a study by the federal government’s National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health.

A study by RAND Corporation found that adolescents who made pledges to remain virgins until marriage were less likely to be sexually active over the three-year study period than other youth who were similar to them, but who did not make a virginity pledge.

When it comes to virginity pledges, studies reveal mixed results. The government may want to take a long, hard look at the results of research conducted by Dr. Janet Rosenbaum of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, before spending more than $176 million to fund abstinence-based sexual education programs in some of America’s public schools.

Virginity pledges are promises made by youths to remain a virgin until married. Pledges may include additional promises, including avoidance of looking at pornography and not lying down-even while watching television-with members of the opposite sex.

Rosenbaum probed data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health, which surveyed 11,000 middle and high school students about their sexual behaviors and opinions in 1995, and conducted two follow-up surveys with the same participants over a span of five years.

Rosenbaum’s rigid analysis used more than 100 variables in order to narrow her research to 3,400 students who in 1995 had not had sex or pledged and shared the same views on sex, religion and birth control.

Do these pledges have staying power? Rosenbaum found that 82 percent of students who had taken a pledge denied ever having pledged and withdrew from their commitment. More than half of both pledgers and non-pledgers engaged in various types of sexual activity, had experienced sex for the first time by age 21 and had an average of three sexual partners.

Rosenbaum also discovered that unmarried pledgers were less likely than non-pledgers to use birth control or condoms to prevent pregnancy or sexually transmitted diseases (STDs). “Teens learn condoms don’t protect you completely from human papillomavirus (HPV) and herpes, which is true, but they may not realize that they protect against all the fluid-based STDs,” Rosenbaum told Health Magazine. “People end up thinking you may as well not bother using birth control or condoms.”

Both groups in Rosenbaum’s study reported similar numbers in occurrences of STDs. In an unrelated study, researchers with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) had found that the overall STD rate among 838 girls in a recent federal study was 26 percent, which translates to more than 3-million girls nationwide.

Dr. Ronald Valdiserri, an expert on preventing sexually transmitted diseases at the CDC, said in The New York Times that under the Clinton and Bush administrations, the agency has promoted abstinence as the one sure-fire way to prevent sexually transmitted diseases.

How can one stay on top of information that is accurate? Ask a doctor. If relying only on internet resources, Rosenbaum suggests to gather information from a broad range of sources, from Focus on the Family to Planned Parenthood.

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Keep Plan B For Emergencies, Not For Routine Use

Tuesday, February 17th, 2009

With this troubling economy looming over us, it seems nothing is safe from the choking grasp of a worldwide marketplace in tailspin.

Even sex can’t escape the pattern.

More and more people are finding the rising cost in birth control distressing, putting a strain on people’s sex lives, maybe even halting them.

For students at Eastern, this isn’t much of a problem. Health Service routinely offers condoms at extremely low prices, encouraging safe sexual practices without burning a hole in students’ pockets.

But what about other people?

Students take this readily available birth control for granted without considering how rising prices affect those who haven’t been blessed with the gift of good birth control at low prices like some kind of contraceptive Wal-Mart.

The rising price in birth control methods has some people considering an alternative strategy: Plan B.

Meant to be taken rarely in the event of improper or irregular birth control use, or in the case of unprotected sex, Plan B contains a high dosage of the hormone progestin, reducing the chance of pregnancy by about 89 percent. According to some Web sites, about 23 percent of women experience side effects including nausea, headaches or vomiting.

In 2006, the Food and Drug Administration approved the drug for over-the-counter use, provided the consumer is over the age of 18.

And so it seems, rather than suffer the ballooning price of condoms and birth control pills, people would rather turn to a medicine that is intended only for occasional use.

In Tuesday’s edition of The Daily Eastern News, Amy Malmen, the pharmacy director at Health Service, warned of the effects of routine use of the drug.

“Some women will experience nausea, fatigue, headache and changes in their menstrual cycle,” Malmen said. “You are just opening up yourself to a greater risk.”

It seems obvious that a drug with such harsh side effects should be intended strictly for occasional, rare use, but still people rely on it. It’s important to practice safe sex, but one should do so within the scope of what is healthy.

Of course, the easiest method of preventing pregnancy is abstinence, but if sex is really that important to the individual’s life, the safest alternative is to shell out the extra dollars. Whatever the case, don’t rely on a drug intended strictly in case of emergencies.

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Depression, Lack of Sex Drive Linked To Pill

Monday, February 16th, 2009

“After a month or so of me being on hormonal birth control, my boyfriend started to notice a change in me.”

Holi Cousins, a stay-at-home mom from North Carolina, started taking the birth control pill in 2005. Months later, she and her boyfriend noticed serious changes in her attitude.

“I was emotional, depressed, lethargic, moody, snappy and my sex drive was decreasing,” she said. “Eventually after trying antidepressants unsuccessfully … I found [an online] discussion forum and saw that I was not alone.”

On the forum, Cousins discovered that thousands of women were making connections between hormonal birth control, such as the pill or the patch, with negative side effects, such as depression and lack of sex drive.

“It occurred to me that there was no hard evidence or research into this subject that was easily accessible,” Cousins said. “I took it upon myself to create a survey that would at least give women some idea as to what other women experienced while using [hormonal birth control].

“[I wanted to] enlighten women to the possible side effects and dangers that are not necessarily listed and that doctors neglect to forewarn them about.”

Cousins’ survey had over 540 responses from women aged 15 to 44 and results showed that over 50 per cent of those 540 respondents using hormonal birth control experienced depression, anxiety, dramatic mood swings, lack of energy and irrational crying.

Acting medical director Jim Shaw from Western Student Health Services said although there are negative side effects, the women reported in surveys such as this are only a small percentage of women on the pill.

“I think it is grossly unfair to describe the pill in negative terms,” he said. “If you start looking on the blogs … you are going to see huge side effects all over the place.”

“You will always find someone who is not pleased with the pill, but it is a small percentage of those people who are actually on the pill.”

In order to limit the number of women experiencing negative side effects and to inform women of the possibility of certain effects, Student Health Services does not provide birth control to women without having a consultation first.

“We have a nurse counselling appointment; it is about 40 minutes of really explicit information on all types of birth control,” Shaw said. “They talk about every type of birth control and also outline the effects and side effects of every mode.

“There are many reasons to go on a birth control pill … whether it is cycle control or for pain during periods. We recommend it for a number of reasons. There are some really good points to being on birth control … it is preventative medicine.”

Alternatively, Mohawk College post-graduate public relations student Meaghan Ketcheson, is not on hormonal birth control as a precautionary method.

“People say the pill will stop acne, regulate your period and stop you from getting pregnant but it also has long-term health effects,” she said. “My mother was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2002 … and her doctor told her that there had been studies linking breast cancer to birth control.

“She had been on birth control for years. Now the doctor says that she would not recommend birth control for me because of my mom’s history. There was no breast cancer in our family history and given the length of time she was on the pill, they linked the two.”

Cousins said she was not attempting to stop women from using hormonal birth control in her survey, but instead trying to inform women.

“I am not trying to create a ‘hate hormonal birth control’ campaign or fight any huge drug company,” she said. “I would like for women to … make the right decision for themselves.

“It seems only normal that if you [are] … taking an added dose of hormones it is going to have, at the very least, some effect on us.”

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Birth Control Use On The Rise

Sunday, February 15th, 2009

The tightened economy also has some people thinking twice before starting a family.

Local health officials say the demand for contraceptives is on the rise. Officials say they’re scheduling more family planning appointments than they have in the past.

“Right now, when the economy is tough, it’s important to plan what you’re doing and the more control you can have over expenditures the better. So it is important to plan your pregnancies and be sure they’re going to be healthy and have them in a good way that works for your lifestyle,” says Dr. Lilian Peake, District Health Director.

Doctors also report seeing an increase in pregnancies among people who can’t afford birth control and don’t have access to free contraceptives.

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