Paola Miranda - Academia.edu (original) (raw)

Papers by Paola Miranda

Research paper thumbnail of Plasma levels of levonorgestrel in women during longterm use of norplants

Contraception, 1980

Levonorgestrel plasma levels were determined by a specific radioimmunoassay in a group of 110 wom... more Levonorgestrel plasma levels were determined by a specific radioimmunoassay in a group of 110 women at various intervals between 1 and 60 months following implantation of six silastic capsules containing levonorgestrel (Norplant). The implants were placed subdermally in the volar aspect of the forearm. Blood samples were taken twice a week for six consecutive weeks in each subject. Blood drawn from the antecubital vein ipsilateral to the implant site contained two to three times more levonorgestrel than contralateral samples. Average systemic plasma levels represented by contralateral samples ranged from 0.35 +/- 0.03 to 0.29 +/- 0.02 ng/ml (Mean +/- S.E.) in the first and fifth year, respectively. The difference between these values is statistically significant at the 5% level. The results of the regression analysis of individual levels suggest that the decline observed throughout the first five years is mainly due to an early decrease taking place in the first two years. When the sampling period was repeated in the same subjects two or three times 10 to 24 months apart, no significant difference was found. A significant negative correlation was found between plasma levonorgestrel levels and body weight and body surface. The data indicate that the contraceptive efficacy of Norplant during the first five years of use is associated with sustained release of levonorgestrel and is in keeping with the estimated life span of Norplant of seven years.

Research paper thumbnail of Fertility regulation in nursing women: IV. Long-term influence of a low-dose combined oral contraceptive initiated at day 30 postpartum upon lactation and infant growth

Contraception, 1983

The study was designed to test the long-term influence of a low-dose combined oral contraceptive ... more The study was designed to test the long-term influence of a low-dose combined oral contraceptive upon lactation and infant growth when treatment was initiated at day 30 postpartum. The contraceptive tested contained ethinyl estradiol 0.03 mg and levonorgestrel 0.15 mg. Two control groups were formed by women who received an injectable placebo or a Copper T at day 30 postpartum. Women in the injectable placebo group received non-hormonal contraceptives at day 90 postpartum. An exacting list of requirements for admission and continuation in the study was applied to all groups. The oral contraceptive group had a significantly lower percentage of cases in full nursing from the 4th through the 10th postpartum month when compared to both control groups. The average absolute weight of infants in the oral contraceptive group was significantly lower at several ages when compared to the placebo group but not when compared to the Copper T group. No adverse side effects upon infant's health were detected. It was concluded that the oral contraceptive tested showed a moderate inhibitory influence upon lactation when treatment was initiated at the beginning of the second postpartum month.

Research paper thumbnail of Fertility regulation in nursing women: V. Long-term influence of a low-dose combined oral contraceptive initiated at day 90 postpartum upon lactation and infant growth

Contraception, 1983

The study was designed to test the long-term influence of a low-dose oral contraceptive upon lact... more The study was designed to test the long-term influence of a low-dose oral contraceptive upon lactation and infant growth when treatment was initiated at day 90 postpartum. The contraceptive tested contained ethinyl estradiol 0.03 mg and levonorgestrel 0.15 mg. The control group was formed by women who chose non-hormonal contraception at the same postpartum time. Only cases who were in exclusive breast-feeding with a minimal infant daily weight increase of 20 g per day during the third month of age were included. The oral contraceptive group showed a significantly lower percentage of cases in full nursing from the 6th postpartum month and a significantly lower infant weight increase during the 4th month of age when compared to the control group. No differences were found in the absolute infant weight up to one year of age. No adverse side effects upon infant's health were detected. It was concluded that the oral contraceptive tested showed a moderate inhibitory influence upon lactation when treatment was initiated at day 90 postpartum.

Research paper thumbnail of Fertility regulation in nursing women: VIII. Progesterone plasma levels and contraceptive efficacy of a progesterone-releasing vaginal ring

Contraception, 1985

The administration of pr~esterone during lactation has been proposed ~S'a convenient contraceptiv... more The administration of pr~esterone during lactation has been proposed ~S'a convenient contraceptive for the postpartum period.

Research paper thumbnail of Plasma progesterone levels during long-term treatment with levonorgestrel silastic implants

European Journal of Endocrinology, 1982

Plasma progesterone levels were measured in 113 women using a subdermal implant containing 200 mg... more Plasma progesterone levels were measured in 113 women using a subdermal implant containing 200 mg levonorgestrel (NORPLANT) in an attempt to assess the roles of anovulation and inadequate luteal function in the contraceptive action of this method. Twenty-two women using an IUD (Copper T 200) served as a control group. Blood samples were taken twice a week for 6 consecutive weeks. This was done one to four times in each subject during the first 7 years after insertion of NORPLANT. Plasma progesterone was measured by a specific RIA and criteria based upon normal values in this laboratory were used to define each set of samples as ovulatory, uncertain or anovulatory. The rate of anovulation varied between 25 and 80% throughout the 7 years. The highest rate was observed during the first year of treatment of treatment. The rate of anovulation was significantly correlated with the plasma levels of levonorgestrel. Varying degrees of inadequate corpus luteum function were detected among NORPLANT users. All sets of samples in the control group were ovulatory and compatible with normal luteal function. These results clearly show that continuous administration of levonorgestrel by means of NORPLANT interferes with ovulation and/or luteal function in a significant proportion of cycles throughout the first 7 years of use.

Research paper thumbnail of Fertility regulation in nursing women

Contraception, 1997

This study evaluated the performance of progesterone vaginal rings (n = 187), progestin-only pill... more This study evaluated the performance of progesterone vaginal rings (n = 187), progestin-only pills (n = 117), NorplantĀ® implants (n = 120), and Copper T 380-A intrauterine devices (n = 122) in lactating women. Contraceptive efficacy, bleeding pattern, and influence of the method upon breastfeeding duration and infant growth were compared with those of untreated women (n = 236) who

Research paper thumbnail of Long-term follow-up of women treated with NORPLANTR implants

Contraception, 1987

A BSTRA This report describes the long-term follow-up of 376 women who received NORPLANT R implan... more A BSTRA This report describes the long-term follow-up of 376 women who received NORPLANT R implants in the perLod 0ccober 1974 through May 1979.

Research paper thumbnail of Fertility regulation in nursing women. VI. Contraceptive effectiveness of a subdermal progesterone implant

Research paper thumbnail of Plasma levels of levonorgestrel in women during longterm use of Norplant

Contraception, 1981

Levonorgestrel plasma levels were determined by a specific radioimmunoassay in a group of 110 wom... more Levonorgestrel plasma levels were determined by a specific radioimmunoassay in a group of 110 women at various intervals between 1 and 60 months following implantation of six silastic capsules containing levonorgestrel (Norplant). The implants were placed subdermally in the volar aspect of the forearm. Blood samples were taken twice a week for six consecutive weeks in each subject. Blood drawn from the antecubital vein ipsilateral to the implant site contained two to three times more levonorgestrel than contralateral samples. Average systemic plasma levels represented by contralateral samples ranged from 0.35 +/- 0.03 to 0.29 +/- 0.02 ng/ml (Mean +/- S.E.) in the first and fifth year, respectively. The difference between these values is statistically significant at the 5% level. The results of the regression analysis of individual levels suggest that the decline observed throughout the first five years is mainly due to an early decrease taking place in the first two years. When the sampling period was repeated in the same subjects two or three times 10 to 24 months apart, no significant difference was found. A significant negative correlation was found between plasma levonorgestrel levels and body weight and body surface. The data indicate that the contraceptive efficacy of Norplant during the first five years of use is associated with sustained release of levonorgestrel and is in keeping with the estimated life span of Norplant of seven years.

Research paper thumbnail of A five-year clinical trial of levonorgestrel silastic implants (Norplant

Contraception, 1982

Silastic implants containing the progestin, levonorgestrel, were tested as a long-term contracept... more Silastic implants containing the progestin, levonorgestrel, were tested as a long-term contraceptive system in 101 women. During five full years of use, no pregnancies occurred. The 5-year continuation rate was 54%. Menstrual irregularities were the most frequent reason for termination of use but only during the first year. More than half of the terminations for this reason were in the first year. Some of the subjects elected to continue use of the implants beyond 5 years, allowing release rate data to be obtained through 6 years. From the second through the sixth year of use, the implants delivered a constant 30 micrograms per day of levonorgestrel to the subjects, and even after six years 57% of the original steroid content remained in the capsules. Return of fertility following removal was essentially immediate and not related to time of use. Medical reasons for removal were infrequent and no pattern was discernible.

Research paper thumbnail of A STUDY ON THE FEASIBILITY OF SUPPRESSING OVARIAN ACTIVITY FOLLOWING THE END OF POSTPARTUM AMENORRHOEA BY INCREASING THE FREQUENCY OF SUCKLING

Clinical Endocrinology, 1988

The aim of the study was to test the effect of increasing the frequency of breastfeeding upon ova... more The aim of the study was to test the effect of increasing the frequency of breastfeeding upon ovarian function following the end of postpartum amenorr-hoea. Women exclusively breastfeeding (n= 14) who experienced their first postpartum menstruation between the third and fifth month after delivery were randomly allocated to an experimental (n= 7) and a control (n= 7) group and studied during the next two cycles. Women in the experimental group agreed to increase the number of breastfeeding episodes per day throughout the second cycle. Blood samples were drawn twice a week from the first to the third postpartum menstruation for prolactin, oestradiol and progesterone determinations. The number of breastfeeding episodes per day and night and the length of each episode were recorded daily. An average frequency of 11 nursing episodes per 24 h was reported during the first study cycle in both groups. The experimental group increased by 50% the breastfeeding frequency after the second menstruation while the control group kept its spontaneous feeding pattern. The increase of suckling frequency occurred mainly during day hours. The total breastfeeding time per 24 h was not increased. The length of the menstrual cycle was not altered by the increased suckling frequency. The endocrine pattern differed neither between the first and second cycle of the experimental group nor between the experimental and control group, with the exception of PRL levels which were higher in the experimental group throughout both cycles. Twenty cycles (71%) showed progesterone values compatible with ovulation (> 9.5 nmol/l). The highest progesterone values and the highest oestradiol values observed in the ovulatory cycles of lactating women were within the range found in non-nursing fertile women. Plasma levels of PRL were significantly elevated in all cycles but one, in comparison with PRL levels in non-nursing women. It is concluded that if cyclic ovarian function is reestablished early in fully nursing women, a mere increase in the number of breastfeeding episodes, without augmenting total suckling time and the frequency of nocturnal episodes, does not provide a sufficient stimulus to re-suppress the pituitary-ovarian axis.

Research paper thumbnail of Mechanism of Action of Progesterone as Contraceptive for Lactating Women

Annals of The New York Academy of Sciences, 1991

Research paper thumbnail of Early Difference in the Endocrine Profile of Long and Short Lactational Amenorrhea

Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 1991

The endocrine profiles associated with long and short lactational amenorrhea were assessed in a l... more The endocrine profiles associated with long and short lactational amenorrhea were assessed in a longitudinal study in which morning blood samples were drawn in 48 women from the first postpartum month until the recovery of ovulation and in a cross-sectional study in which the samples were drawn throughout 24 h at the end of the third postpartum month in 10 fully nursing and amenorrheic women. PRL, LH, FSH, estradiol (E2), progesterone, cortisol, and dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate were measured. In both studies we detected a smaller PRL increase in response to suckling (P less than 0.001) and higher E2 levels (P less than 0.001) in nursing women who ovulated within 6 months postpartum compared to those in women who did not. Such differences were observed early after delivery when all women were fully nursing and amenorrheic. These results suggest some probable sources of variability in the duration of lactational amenorrhea in our population. The greater PRL response to suckling associated with longer amenorrhea may be due to higher sensitivity of the breast-hypothalamus-pituitary system or a stronger suckling stimulus in this group. Differences in plasma E2 levels between longer and shorter periods of amenorrhea may reflect dissimilar endogenous production, intake, or clearance of estrogens.

Research paper thumbnail of Fertility regulation in nursing women: III. Short-term influence of a low-dose combined oral contraceptive upon lactation and infant growth

Contraception, 1983

The study was designed to test the short-term influence of a low-dose combined oral contraceptive... more The study was designed to test the short-term influence of a low-dose combined oral contraceptive upon lactation and infant growth when treatment was initiated at day 30 postpartum. The contraceptive tested contained ethinyl estradiol 0.03 mg and levonorgestrel 0.15 mg. Two control groups were formed by women who received either an oral placebo or an injectable placebo at day 30 postpartum. An exacting list of requirements for admission and continuation in the study was applied to all groups. The oral contraceptive group had a lower percentage of cases in exclusive breastfeeding at day 91 postpartum when compared to both control groups. Infants in the oral contraceptive group showed a significantly lower average absolute weight at days 61 and 91 postpartum and a significantly lower average daily weight increase during the first month of treatment when compared to both control groups. It was concluded that the oral contraceptive tested had a negative influence upon lactation and child growth.

Research paper thumbnail of T TR RA AN NS SC CR RI IT TO O P PO OR R L LO OS S A AN NG GE EL LE ES S D

odo el mundo cree que fue por culpa de la nieve. Y en cierto sentido supongo que es verdad.

Research paper thumbnail of Plasma levels of levonorgestrel in women during longterm use of norplants

Contraception, 1980

Levonorgestrel plasma levels were determined by a specific radioimmunoassay in a group of 110 wom... more Levonorgestrel plasma levels were determined by a specific radioimmunoassay in a group of 110 women at various intervals between 1 and 60 months following implantation of six silastic capsules containing levonorgestrel (Norplant). The implants were placed subdermally in the volar aspect of the forearm. Blood samples were taken twice a week for six consecutive weeks in each subject. Blood drawn from the antecubital vein ipsilateral to the implant site contained two to three times more levonorgestrel than contralateral samples. Average systemic plasma levels represented by contralateral samples ranged from 0.35 +/- 0.03 to 0.29 +/- 0.02 ng/ml (Mean +/- S.E.) in the first and fifth year, respectively. The difference between these values is statistically significant at the 5% level. The results of the regression analysis of individual levels suggest that the decline observed throughout the first five years is mainly due to an early decrease taking place in the first two years. When the sampling period was repeated in the same subjects two or three times 10 to 24 months apart, no significant difference was found. A significant negative correlation was found between plasma levonorgestrel levels and body weight and body surface. The data indicate that the contraceptive efficacy of Norplant during the first five years of use is associated with sustained release of levonorgestrel and is in keeping with the estimated life span of Norplant of seven years.

Research paper thumbnail of Fertility regulation in nursing women: IV. Long-term influence of a low-dose combined oral contraceptive initiated at day 30 postpartum upon lactation and infant growth

Contraception, 1983

The study was designed to test the long-term influence of a low-dose combined oral contraceptive ... more The study was designed to test the long-term influence of a low-dose combined oral contraceptive upon lactation and infant growth when treatment was initiated at day 30 postpartum. The contraceptive tested contained ethinyl estradiol 0.03 mg and levonorgestrel 0.15 mg. Two control groups were formed by women who received an injectable placebo or a Copper T at day 30 postpartum. Women in the injectable placebo group received non-hormonal contraceptives at day 90 postpartum. An exacting list of requirements for admission and continuation in the study was applied to all groups. The oral contraceptive group had a significantly lower percentage of cases in full nursing from the 4th through the 10th postpartum month when compared to both control groups. The average absolute weight of infants in the oral contraceptive group was significantly lower at several ages when compared to the placebo group but not when compared to the Copper T group. No adverse side effects upon infant's health were detected. It was concluded that the oral contraceptive tested showed a moderate inhibitory influence upon lactation when treatment was initiated at the beginning of the second postpartum month.

Research paper thumbnail of Fertility regulation in nursing women: V. Long-term influence of a low-dose combined oral contraceptive initiated at day 90 postpartum upon lactation and infant growth

Contraception, 1983

The study was designed to test the long-term influence of a low-dose oral contraceptive upon lact... more The study was designed to test the long-term influence of a low-dose oral contraceptive upon lactation and infant growth when treatment was initiated at day 90 postpartum. The contraceptive tested contained ethinyl estradiol 0.03 mg and levonorgestrel 0.15 mg. The control group was formed by women who chose non-hormonal contraception at the same postpartum time. Only cases who were in exclusive breast-feeding with a minimal infant daily weight increase of 20 g per day during the third month of age were included. The oral contraceptive group showed a significantly lower percentage of cases in full nursing from the 6th postpartum month and a significantly lower infant weight increase during the 4th month of age when compared to the control group. No differences were found in the absolute infant weight up to one year of age. No adverse side effects upon infant's health were detected. It was concluded that the oral contraceptive tested showed a moderate inhibitory influence upon lactation when treatment was initiated at day 90 postpartum.

Research paper thumbnail of Fertility regulation in nursing women: VIII. Progesterone plasma levels and contraceptive efficacy of a progesterone-releasing vaginal ring

Contraception, 1985

The administration of pr~esterone during lactation has been proposed ~S'a convenient contraceptiv... more The administration of pr~esterone during lactation has been proposed ~S'a convenient contraceptive for the postpartum period.

Research paper thumbnail of Plasma progesterone levels during long-term treatment with levonorgestrel silastic implants

European Journal of Endocrinology, 1982

Plasma progesterone levels were measured in 113 women using a subdermal implant containing 200 mg... more Plasma progesterone levels were measured in 113 women using a subdermal implant containing 200 mg levonorgestrel (NORPLANT) in an attempt to assess the roles of anovulation and inadequate luteal function in the contraceptive action of this method. Twenty-two women using an IUD (Copper T 200) served as a control group. Blood samples were taken twice a week for 6 consecutive weeks. This was done one to four times in each subject during the first 7 years after insertion of NORPLANT. Plasma progesterone was measured by a specific RIA and criteria based upon normal values in this laboratory were used to define each set of samples as ovulatory, uncertain or anovulatory. The rate of anovulation varied between 25 and 80% throughout the 7 years. The highest rate was observed during the first year of treatment of treatment. The rate of anovulation was significantly correlated with the plasma levels of levonorgestrel. Varying degrees of inadequate corpus luteum function were detected among NORPLANT users. All sets of samples in the control group were ovulatory and compatible with normal luteal function. These results clearly show that continuous administration of levonorgestrel by means of NORPLANT interferes with ovulation and/or luteal function in a significant proportion of cycles throughout the first 7 years of use.

Research paper thumbnail of Fertility regulation in nursing women

Contraception, 1997

This study evaluated the performance of progesterone vaginal rings (n = 187), progestin-only pill... more This study evaluated the performance of progesterone vaginal rings (n = 187), progestin-only pills (n = 117), NorplantĀ® implants (n = 120), and Copper T 380-A intrauterine devices (n = 122) in lactating women. Contraceptive efficacy, bleeding pattern, and influence of the method upon breastfeeding duration and infant growth were compared with those of untreated women (n = 236) who

Research paper thumbnail of Long-term follow-up of women treated with NORPLANTR implants

Contraception, 1987

A BSTRA This report describes the long-term follow-up of 376 women who received NORPLANT R implan... more A BSTRA This report describes the long-term follow-up of 376 women who received NORPLANT R implants in the perLod 0ccober 1974 through May 1979.

Research paper thumbnail of Fertility regulation in nursing women. VI. Contraceptive effectiveness of a subdermal progesterone implant

Research paper thumbnail of Plasma levels of levonorgestrel in women during longterm use of Norplant

Contraception, 1981

Levonorgestrel plasma levels were determined by a specific radioimmunoassay in a group of 110 wom... more Levonorgestrel plasma levels were determined by a specific radioimmunoassay in a group of 110 women at various intervals between 1 and 60 months following implantation of six silastic capsules containing levonorgestrel (Norplant). The implants were placed subdermally in the volar aspect of the forearm. Blood samples were taken twice a week for six consecutive weeks in each subject. Blood drawn from the antecubital vein ipsilateral to the implant site contained two to three times more levonorgestrel than contralateral samples. Average systemic plasma levels represented by contralateral samples ranged from 0.35 +/- 0.03 to 0.29 +/- 0.02 ng/ml (Mean +/- S.E.) in the first and fifth year, respectively. The difference between these values is statistically significant at the 5% level. The results of the regression analysis of individual levels suggest that the decline observed throughout the first five years is mainly due to an early decrease taking place in the first two years. When the sampling period was repeated in the same subjects two or three times 10 to 24 months apart, no significant difference was found. A significant negative correlation was found between plasma levonorgestrel levels and body weight and body surface. The data indicate that the contraceptive efficacy of Norplant during the first five years of use is associated with sustained release of levonorgestrel and is in keeping with the estimated life span of Norplant of seven years.

Research paper thumbnail of A five-year clinical trial of levonorgestrel silastic implants (Norplant

Contraception, 1982

Silastic implants containing the progestin, levonorgestrel, were tested as a long-term contracept... more Silastic implants containing the progestin, levonorgestrel, were tested as a long-term contraceptive system in 101 women. During five full years of use, no pregnancies occurred. The 5-year continuation rate was 54%. Menstrual irregularities were the most frequent reason for termination of use but only during the first year. More than half of the terminations for this reason were in the first year. Some of the subjects elected to continue use of the implants beyond 5 years, allowing release rate data to be obtained through 6 years. From the second through the sixth year of use, the implants delivered a constant 30 micrograms per day of levonorgestrel to the subjects, and even after six years 57% of the original steroid content remained in the capsules. Return of fertility following removal was essentially immediate and not related to time of use. Medical reasons for removal were infrequent and no pattern was discernible.

Research paper thumbnail of A STUDY ON THE FEASIBILITY OF SUPPRESSING OVARIAN ACTIVITY FOLLOWING THE END OF POSTPARTUM AMENORRHOEA BY INCREASING THE FREQUENCY OF SUCKLING

Clinical Endocrinology, 1988

The aim of the study was to test the effect of increasing the frequency of breastfeeding upon ova... more The aim of the study was to test the effect of increasing the frequency of breastfeeding upon ovarian function following the end of postpartum amenorr-hoea. Women exclusively breastfeeding (n= 14) who experienced their first postpartum menstruation between the third and fifth month after delivery were randomly allocated to an experimental (n= 7) and a control (n= 7) group and studied during the next two cycles. Women in the experimental group agreed to increase the number of breastfeeding episodes per day throughout the second cycle. Blood samples were drawn twice a week from the first to the third postpartum menstruation for prolactin, oestradiol and progesterone determinations. The number of breastfeeding episodes per day and night and the length of each episode were recorded daily. An average frequency of 11 nursing episodes per 24 h was reported during the first study cycle in both groups. The experimental group increased by 50% the breastfeeding frequency after the second menstruation while the control group kept its spontaneous feeding pattern. The increase of suckling frequency occurred mainly during day hours. The total breastfeeding time per 24 h was not increased. The length of the menstrual cycle was not altered by the increased suckling frequency. The endocrine pattern differed neither between the first and second cycle of the experimental group nor between the experimental and control group, with the exception of PRL levels which were higher in the experimental group throughout both cycles. Twenty cycles (71%) showed progesterone values compatible with ovulation (> 9.5 nmol/l). The highest progesterone values and the highest oestradiol values observed in the ovulatory cycles of lactating women were within the range found in non-nursing fertile women. Plasma levels of PRL were significantly elevated in all cycles but one, in comparison with PRL levels in non-nursing women. It is concluded that if cyclic ovarian function is reestablished early in fully nursing women, a mere increase in the number of breastfeeding episodes, without augmenting total suckling time and the frequency of nocturnal episodes, does not provide a sufficient stimulus to re-suppress the pituitary-ovarian axis.

Research paper thumbnail of Mechanism of Action of Progesterone as Contraceptive for Lactating Women

Annals of The New York Academy of Sciences, 1991

Research paper thumbnail of Early Difference in the Endocrine Profile of Long and Short Lactational Amenorrhea

Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 1991

The endocrine profiles associated with long and short lactational amenorrhea were assessed in a l... more The endocrine profiles associated with long and short lactational amenorrhea were assessed in a longitudinal study in which morning blood samples were drawn in 48 women from the first postpartum month until the recovery of ovulation and in a cross-sectional study in which the samples were drawn throughout 24 h at the end of the third postpartum month in 10 fully nursing and amenorrheic women. PRL, LH, FSH, estradiol (E2), progesterone, cortisol, and dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate were measured. In both studies we detected a smaller PRL increase in response to suckling (P less than 0.001) and higher E2 levels (P less than 0.001) in nursing women who ovulated within 6 months postpartum compared to those in women who did not. Such differences were observed early after delivery when all women were fully nursing and amenorrheic. These results suggest some probable sources of variability in the duration of lactational amenorrhea in our population. The greater PRL response to suckling associated with longer amenorrhea may be due to higher sensitivity of the breast-hypothalamus-pituitary system or a stronger suckling stimulus in this group. Differences in plasma E2 levels between longer and shorter periods of amenorrhea may reflect dissimilar endogenous production, intake, or clearance of estrogens.

Research paper thumbnail of Fertility regulation in nursing women: III. Short-term influence of a low-dose combined oral contraceptive upon lactation and infant growth

Contraception, 1983

The study was designed to test the short-term influence of a low-dose combined oral contraceptive... more The study was designed to test the short-term influence of a low-dose combined oral contraceptive upon lactation and infant growth when treatment was initiated at day 30 postpartum. The contraceptive tested contained ethinyl estradiol 0.03 mg and levonorgestrel 0.15 mg. Two control groups were formed by women who received either an oral placebo or an injectable placebo at day 30 postpartum. An exacting list of requirements for admission and continuation in the study was applied to all groups. The oral contraceptive group had a lower percentage of cases in exclusive breastfeeding at day 91 postpartum when compared to both control groups. Infants in the oral contraceptive group showed a significantly lower average absolute weight at days 61 and 91 postpartum and a significantly lower average daily weight increase during the first month of treatment when compared to both control groups. It was concluded that the oral contraceptive tested had a negative influence upon lactation and child growth.

Research paper thumbnail of T TR RA AN NS SC CR RI IT TO O P PO OR R L LO OS S A AN NG GE EL LE ES S D

odo el mundo cree que fue por culpa de la nieve. Y en cierto sentido supongo que es verdad.