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Puberty, Pregnancy, Parturition, Puerperium—Surveillance by Intertwined Innumerable Neurohumoral Factors;Prevention, Postponement, Termination of Pregnancy, Precipitation of Parturition, Hysterectomy [Except for Post Partum Hemorrhage, Cancer Uteri]—Deleterious—Proof of Basic Concept Study by Retrospective Analysis

Puberty, Pregnancy, Parturition, Puerperium—Surveillance by Intertwined Innumerable Neurohumoral Factors;Prevention, Postponement, Termination of Pregnancy, Precipitation of Parturition, Hysterectomy [Except for Post Partum Hemorrhage, Cancer Uteri]—Deleterious—Proof of Basic Concept Study by Retrospective Analysis
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摘要 <strong>Case 1:</strong> In 1990, a 23-year-old woman, married for two years, with primary infertility, was brought by her husband, with ultrasonography of abdomen, pelvis report stating multiple tiny cysts in both ovaries, infantile uterus;so husband claimed he was cheated to marry a woman with an infantile uterus, he wanted to divorce her on medical grounds. Analysing the problem revealed the woman had irregular menstruation before marriage due to polycystic ovaries;the husband took a prescription of oral contraceptive pills from a clinician, for one cycle to regularise menstruation of his wife;which he continued to administer for 2 years, with a desire to enable conception of his wife not understanding oral contraceptive pills with their exogenous oestrogen, suppress endogenous oestrogen preventing ovulation to conceive, produce withdrawal bleeding, due to suppressed endogenous oestrogen-suppressed uterine development resulting in infantile uterus. <strong>Case 2:</strong> In 1996, a 25-year-old woman underwent lower segment Cesarian section, 10 days prior to her EDC [expected date of child birth], as per the request of her husband who desired to see the baby before boarding his flight overseas;lower segment Cesarian section was performed by a urologist, general surgeon, but the mother expired on the theatre table, probably because the woman’s expected date of childbirth range would have fallen into the 15 days after expected date of childbirth norm, when her oestrogen would not have dipped, oxytocin would not have been released, to prevent postpartum haemorrhage. <strong>Case 3:</strong> In 1998, a 27-year-old woman presented with postpartum haemorrhage of one hour duration, following vaginal delivery of foeto placental unit;with haemoglobin of 3 gm%;immediately hysterectomy of the soft uterus was performed, mobilising 10 units of blood;once bleeding uterus was severed, all the 10 units of blood were transfused immediately, she survived. <strong>Case 4:</strong> In 1999 woman of 32 years [without antenatal <strong>Case 1:</strong> In 1990, a 23-year-old woman, married for two years, with primary infertility, was brought by her husband, with ultrasonography of abdomen, pelvis report stating multiple tiny cysts in both ovaries, infantile uterus;so husband claimed he was cheated to marry a woman with an infantile uterus, he wanted to divorce her on medical grounds. Analysing the problem revealed the woman had irregular menstruation before marriage due to polycystic ovaries;the husband took a prescription of oral contraceptive pills from a clinician, for one cycle to regularise menstruation of his wife;which he continued to administer for 2 years, with a desire to enable conception of his wife not understanding oral contraceptive pills with their exogenous oestrogen, suppress endogenous oestrogen preventing ovulation to conceive, produce withdrawal bleeding, due to suppressed endogenous oestrogen-suppressed uterine development resulting in infantile uterus. <strong>Case 2:</strong> In 1996, a 25-year-old woman underwent lower segment Cesarian section, 10 days prior to her EDC [expected date of child birth], as per the request of her husband who desired to see the baby before boarding his flight overseas;lower segment Cesarian section was performed by a urologist, general surgeon, but the mother expired on the theatre table, probably because the woman’s expected date of childbirth range would have fallen into the 15 days after expected date of childbirth norm, when her oestrogen would not have dipped, oxytocin would not have been released, to prevent postpartum haemorrhage. <strong>Case 3:</strong> In 1998, a 27-year-old woman presented with postpartum haemorrhage of one hour duration, following vaginal delivery of foeto placental unit;with haemoglobin of 3 gm%;immediately hysterectomy of the soft uterus was performed, mobilising 10 units of blood;once bleeding uterus was severed, all the 10 units of blood were transfused immediately, she survived. <strong>Case 4:</strong> In 1999 woman of 32 years [without antenatal
作者 S. Elizabeth Jeya Vardhini Darmalingam Celestine Raj Manohar Veerakesari Maharani Prema Sudanthira Devi S. Elizabeth Jeya Vardhini; ;Darmalingam;Celestine Raj Manohar; ;Veerakesari; ;Maharani; ;Prema;Sudanthira Devi(Department of General Medicine, Karpagam Faculty of Medical Sciences and Research, University of Madras, Tamil Nadu, India;Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Karpagam Faculty of Medical Sciences and Research, University of Madras, Tamil Nadu, India)
出处 《International Journal of Clinical Medicine》 2021年第11期524-542,共19页 临床医学国际期刊(英文)
关键词 Endogenous Oestrogen PREGNANCY Neuro-Humoral Factors Endogenous Oestrogen Pregnancy Neuro-Humoral Factors
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