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CURRENT PROBLEMS IN OBSTETRICS, GYNECOLOGY,
AND FERTILITY

Mosby Medical Journal reissues updated monograph in two parts.


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"Wellness in Women After 40 Years of Age:
The Role of Sex Hormones and Pheromones
"

Cutler and Genovese fear this erroneous finding of an "improvement in sex lives" will sway women towards unnecessary hysterectomies. They caution those who read reports that claim women's sexual lives will be improved by hysterectomy to look closely at the baseline. Compared with "what" will her sex life be improved?

"With a baseline of below-average sexual activity, the post-hysterectomy 'improvement' is a chimera."

The March/April issue of the reprinted monograph addresses this controversial topic as well as providing extensive current research on the following issues: Sex Hormones and Bone, Depression and Sex Hormones, Four Components of Sexual Health, Indications of Hysterectomy, and Care of the Woman after Hysterectomy.

ABSTRACT: PART II and III:

In the past twenty years, hundreds of peer-reviewed studies have provided a significant body of information to guide the health care of women in the second halves of their lives. The harmonic nature of the fertile reproductive sysytem forms the bacgfoune against which hormonal replacement therapy can be understood to best serve women. In addition, tne 1986 disovery of human pehromones and the subsequesnt 1998 confirmation of their existence increases certain sexual options for amturing women.

Not all hormonal replaement etherapies and wellness reinemsn serve women well. Some regimens have the potentnial to produce disese, especially over-the-coutner remedies...Some regimens profoundly improve the quality of life of many women: some women do not need or want such regimens. All sex hormones affect physiologic systems including the cardiovasculare system, bone mentabolism, cognintive funtion, sexual response, and sexual attractiveness.

*** The complex contributions to the overall health of a woman may not always be understood. Ofetn a hysterectomy can exacerbate - rather than ameliorate - the conditions that led to the surgery. One in 2 American women is offered a hysterectomy, a rate 5 times higher than that of European countries for which data are available. Ninety percent of hysterectomies are not related to cancer; they are elective procedures. Avoidance of elective hysterectomy helps prevent its side effects: sexual deficits, acceleration of cardiovascular and bone disease, and more rapid aging. No efficacy data exist that suggest that elective hysterectomy works better than the alternative approaches that do not induce these side effects.

*** Because hormonal regimens can be prescribed to enhance the quality of life, the review of the available research can allow the medical art to greatly benefit mature women. Not surprisingly, the emerging conclusion reveals that structurally human hormones, prescribed appropriately, almost always best serve the patient.

Also, currently in circulation, PART I of the monograph addresses current research on: Sex Hormones, Perimenopause, Pheromonal Modulation of Brain and Behavior, Sexual Behavior of Women, and Prospectively Measured Changes in Global Sexual Behavior After Application of Putative Pheromones.


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