Dr. Gina Blogs — Gina Nelson MD, Obstetrics and Gynecology

Zika

Medical Monday: Breaking News from the World of Obstetrics and Gynecology

Crying Woman. Tears. Cry.jpg

Vice President Biden has called for the Congress to separate the issue of funding Planned Parenthood from the issue of funding the war against Zika. He has addressed the Republic led Congress in the strongest possible terms. He went so far as to point out the irony of the the fact that the people ostensibly most concerned about the unborn, anti-abortion Republicans, being the least willing to take measure to protect the unborn. Earlier this week, the Senate rejected a 1.1 billion dollar funding bill. Sixty two percent of Americans feel that Congress should approve additional funds to fight Zika, rather than pull them from other programs. 

The CDC (Centers for Disease Control) has reported that Brazil has already noted a doubling of their rate of nervous system defects, including but not limited to, microcephaly. The rate of Guillane-Barre or post viral paralysis has tripled. 

In the mice model, there is some evidence that Zika resides in the eyes. There is speculation, therefore, that it can be spread by tears. 

The WHO ( World Health Organization) has modified their advice for those in or returning from a Zika affected area. Men were to practice safe or no sex for 8 weeks. Now, that recommendation has extended to the same time frame for women: 6 months. This recommendation stands whether or not the couple is trying to conceive. Only 58% of people in the United States know Zika can be spread by sex. 

Not all South American Countries show cases of microcephaly after Zika infection in pregnancy. Not all mosquitos can transmit Zika. For example, Columbia, has had fewer than three dozen cases of microcephaly whereas Brazil has had 2000. Culex mosquitos, which are  20 times more common than Aedes mosquitos, cannot transmit Zika. The sooner basic research is done to find out the reasons behind these observations, the sooner we may get some control over Zika. 

There is other big news. The FDA, Food and Drug Administration, has banned 19 chemicals commonly found in antibacterial soaps, saying not only do they not do any good, but that they actually may do harm. There is concern especially over triclosan and triclocarbon in that they are now felt to promote antibiotic resistance. There is also concern that they may be endocrine disruptors, meaning they may interfere with sex hormones like estrogen and testosterone. Soap and water are the best ways to get clean. While I advise the frequent soaping of hands at work, and routinely upon arriving at home, I prefer my patients avoid soap on the face or any delicate tissues. 

In the good news department, we have several items. First, MRI without contrast appears to be safe in pregnancy. MRI is useful for taking care of pregnant women with many important conditions. 

HPV vaccine provided in the middle school setting met with an 86% adoption rate. This is much better than “ in the wild”. Research of this kind may provide insights into improving vaccine utilization. Maybe some of it boils down to convenience. 

Recent research indicates that use of hormones, in both oral contraceptive and postmenopausal hormone replacement forms, may be responsible for decreasingly mortality rates from ovarian cancer.  Hormone use is known to suppress the ovaries which also seems to suppress the development of this type of cancer. Ovarian cancer is one of the most dreaded Gyn cancers. This is for two reasons:  It usually presents at an advanced stage, and the screening tests for it are not very good.

Help for ovary cancer treatment is coming from an unusual source. IBM’s supercomputer Watson is utilized in a program called Watson for Genomics wherein the genes of known cancer patients are sequenced and uploaded to a database. Personalized treatment plans can be developed for each patient. In the future, this data might be used for better early risk assessment and detection as well. 

Stay tuned next for more breaking news from the world of Obstetrics and Gynecology. Next week should prove very exciting since I will be at Stanford MedX - an amazing conference on innovation in health care. Check it out here : 

http://medicinex.stanford.edu

Medical Monday : Breaking News from the World of Obstetrics and Gynecology 

As per recent precedent and priority, we start with the Zika news. 

Three of nineteen traps in the Miami area have trapped mosquitos which have tested positive for the Zika Virus. New readers will note that this virus is transmitted to humans through mosquitos bites and sex. If a pregnant women acquires the virus, it often leads to severe brain damage to the baby most notably in the form of microcephaly, which means small brain. It also leads to hearing loss. Dr. Anthony Fauci of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease Control and Prevention warned that microcephaly may be “ the top of the iceberg” and that the full impact of Zika may not be apparent until they grow older. Thus it is of paramount public health important especially with regards to the care of pregnant and potentially pregnant women. 

Zika virus infection can also increase the risk of post viral paralysis,Guillain-Barre syndrome, in those who are infected. New research published in the New England Journal of Medicine has confirmed the association with Guillain-Barre in seven different countries.

The FDA has recommended that all donated blood be screened for Zika, even in places where the virus is not present. Zika testing is currently expensive and time consuming, but officials feels this is necessary, given the seriousness of the infection and the fact that many Zika infections are asymptomatic. 

The mosquito vector which carries the Zika virus has a territory spanning only part of the United States. For this reason, officials believe the sexual route of transmission may become more important here that mosquito transmission. 

The director of the CDC (Centers for Disease Control) has stated that federal funds to fight the Zika virus will be exhausted by the end of September. It has already spent $194 million of the $222 million it was allocated. Congress must then act to provide funding to fight the virus effectively.

Postmenopausal hormone therapy is back in the news. Current practice is largely dictated by a landmark study called the Women’s Health Initiative (WHI), which was released in 2002. One of the principal investigators of the WHI, Dr. JoAnne Manson, said the “ WHI findings have been seriously misunderstood and misinterpreted. She indicated that the benefits still outweigh the risk for women of average risk for breast cancer." Aye there’s the rub. To calculate risk, you will need to have a good history taken, including a family history, a physical exam, a mammogram, and maybe even a visit to the genetics counselor. The plot thickens. 

Texas maternal mortality rates have doubled in the last four years and no one knows why. Numerous commentators have now published about this, and most have noted the political and funding challenges to women’s health care there and in the whole bible belt. There is serious speculation as to whether slashing funding for women’s health and the increase in maternal mortality is related.  Some would say that amidst the ardor to defund clinics which provide reproductive health care services like abortion and contraception, that Texas has also weakened its ability to care for pregnant women. In effect, Texas may have shot itself in the foot. It is believed that family planning clinics are an entry point into health care for many women of modest means. It is often the place where pregnancy is diagnosed. Without these clinics, prenatal care is delayed or absent. An editorial in the Dallas Morning News indicated that if were Texas a country, it would rank 31st in the OEC (Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development) for maternal mortality.

Unpacking this further we see that this jump in mortality is predominantly occurring in black women. Heart problems, prescription drug overdoses, and hypertensive disorders of pregnancy like preeclampsia (aka toxemia) are the leading causes of death in these women. I can tell you that to properly follow a women with cardiovascular or blood pressure problems in pregnancy is big undertaking. It involves frequent if not weekly visits, fetal monitor strips, serial Ultrasounds, and social support so the patient can rest. Maternal mortality is the worst complication one can imagine. Complications can happen anywhere, but deaths should be a rarity if care is adequate. According to research in the Journal Obstetrics and Gynecology, Texas maternal mortality rates are the worst in the nation and among the worst in the developed world. Truthfully it’s a disgrace. 

In the practicing medicine without a license department, Ohio passed a law in 2011 stipulating that providers of medical abortion had to use a FDA ( Food and Drug Administration) protocol for the doses of the 2 medications involved, mifepristone and misoprostol. Basically the law required them to follow the package insert, or “ the labelling”. This protocol was developed in 2000. By 2003, specialist organizations such as the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the World Health Organization, found shortcomings with the protocol and recommended changes in the package insert, allowing for the simpler and more effective dosing protocol, but also the evidence based extension of the gestational age for which the drug would be effective, and the ability for women to take the medication at home. However these changes weren’t made due to political reasons.  It now appears that since the law was enacted, women taking the suboptimal dose are more than three times more likely than before to have complications requiring additional intervention, often surgical. In other states without this law, medical providers would simply follow the most up to date recommendations of their professional governing body, including an up to date dosing protocol, regardless of the FDA labelling. This is called “ off-label use” of FDA approved medications. In many cases, in many fields of medicine, off label use is common and necessary to take the best care of patients. Up until May of this year, however, it was illegal to do so in Ohio. I wonder what they did to the rebel caregivers who gave the correct doses ? It would be tough to be a doctor in this climate. If the law didn't get you for off label use of meds, the lawyers could for knowingly giving a potentially unsafe dose of a medication to a patient. 

In May of this year, the FDA corrected the package labeling to reflect the most up to date science on the subject. Regardless of how you feel about abortion, you would not want to give a patient part of a dose of medication to only evacuate her uterus partially, since this can cause hemorrhage and infection !  Dangerous !

You may recall that a few weeks past I reported on the decline in teen pregnancy. At that time we were not precisely sure why. However, now, parsed the data and we have nailed it down. Drum roll please…..It’s…. you guessed it…. contraception !!! It turns out sexual activity did not vary in that time frame. Use of contraception did. It increased from 86% use from 78%. Science !

Perform labor is in the news. The causation of preterm labor has remained a bit of a mystery. To show you how nascent is our science, I present the findings of two recent studies, both retrospective. The first, published in the Maternal and Child Health Journal examined 400,000 births. Resistance to preterm labor seemed to be conferred by three things: birth spacing, optional weight at the beginning of pregnancy, and appropriate weight gain in the pregnancy. Pretty vague, I grant you. Next, is an NIH(National Institute of Health) study of 200,000 women. In this group  they were able to unearth the uncanny fact that women exposed to extremes of temperature early in pregnancy were more likely to deliver preterm. OK. What if they wore appropriate clothing and used climate control devices ? Gosh that is unhelpful information. Whereas, any old crusty Obstetrician can spot preterm labor risk as it walks through the door. She or he might notice the frenzy with which the patient blew in, the smell of cigarettes, the poor nutritional status, or poor dentition (teeth). We need studies which tell us about factors we can change - not the weather ! 

Stay tuned for more breaking news from the world of Ob/Gyn next week on Medical Monday. 

Medical Monday: Breaking News from the World of Obstetrics and Gynecology

In sobering news, results from a study using mice as a model indicate that children's and adult's brain cells which are critical to learning and memory might be susceptible to the Zika virus. Zika may be able to infect neural progenitor cells which serve to replenish normal neurons over the course of a lifetime.

Meanwhile, a second local Zika out break may be beginning in Miami Beach Florida. Louisiana is bracing for Zika in the wake of recent flooding since flooding affords more mosquito breeding grounds. Finally Puerto Rico has declared a state of emergency due to the Zika outbreak. Zika has infected about 10 thousand people there including over 1000 pregnant women. The CDC (Centers for Disease Control) estimates that 10,000 pregnant women could be affected before the end of the season. 

The head of ACOG (American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists) has written a piece highlighting Florida as the worst place to be a pregnant woman. He cited the combination of three things: the threat of Zika, restrictive abortion laws, and the lack of funding to fight the virus. 

CDC director Tom Frieden has indicated that there is now thought to creating a $300 million dollar “ rapid response reserve fund” to combat infections disease such as Zika. 

The CDC is becoming concerned that sexual transmission of the virus can spread beyond its natural geography beyond the territory of the Aedes mosquito. The CDC estimates that the public underestimates the risks of transmitting Zika sexually. 

Brazil has been on the leading edge of the Zika epidemic. Fifty years ago they once combatted this virus. However, they fear this time it will not be so easy. They do believe their mosquito control efforts are yielding results. However, they are beginning to discover the long term medical consequences of Zika. 

According to researchers a the University of Kansas, Zika is unlikely to spread the the majority of North America, however is could plausibly spread to Africa and Southeast Asia. 

In other news, OB/GYNs are in short supply and the supply is due to become even shorter incoming years. Although the field is rewarding in many ways, there are also many disincentives associated with it as well, such as risk of lawsuit and grueling hours. 

The US fertility rate has plummeted to the lowest point on record. Some factors are that women are delaying pregnancy, teens are having fewer pregnancies, and more women are choosing to have no children at all. The first quarter of 2016 saw 60 births per 1000 women, half that of the 1950s. Forty years ago, women had their first baby at 21, on average. In year 2000 it was about 25. Now it is over 26 years of age. It is speculated that the economic downturn may bear on this. It is also speculated that women are increasingly concerned with stability, turning attention to being financially solvent, with adequate education, good jobs, and lower debt. 

 

Stay tuned next week for more breaking news from the world of Obstetrics and Gynecology.  

Medical Monday: Breaking News from the World of Obstetrics and Gynecology

We continue to learn more about the way Zika virus affects babies.  It turns out Zika can affect babies late in pregnancy. In fact, Zika related brain changes may not become apparent until months after they are born. The reason for this is that the baby continues to grow all except the brain, which does not. 

Zika also appears to produce joint deformities. This may take the form of curved or crooked legs or arms. 

We are also learning more about the sexual spread of Zika. Men may be able to spread Zika for longer than six months, longer than previously reported. The Obama administration has shifted another $81 million dollars from the Department of Health and Human Services to continue development of a Zika vaccine.

Florida officials continue to deal with more local spread of Zika in the Miami area. Aggressive spraying programs are underway to reduce mosquito populations. Additionally there are plans to release genetically modified mosquitos which will mate with the natural Aedes Aegypti and render their offspring sterile. This has reportedly reduced the Aedes populations in Brazil, Panama and the Cayman islands by 90%. 

Various commentators are now starting to focus on how abortion politics played a role in the Congressional failure to develop a funding plan for Zika. It continues to play a role. Since Zika produces grave birth defects in babies which usually live, it is a condition for which some women might chose abortion. Marc Rubio (Republican from Florida)  has come out this week saying that he “doesn’t believe a pregnant woman infected with the Zika virus should have the right to an abortion-even if she had reason to believe the child would be born with severe microcephaly. “ A recent STAT Harvard poll indicates that 59% of Americans believe that a women should have a right to end a pregnancy after 24 weeks of testing showed a serious possibility that the fetus had microcephaly caused by the mother’s Zika infection. The same poll also showed most Americans are unaware that Congress left for vacation without securing Zika funding. Meanwhile women and health care workers in Puerto Rico are trying to overcome historical cultural barriers to contraception in a territory at very high risk for Zika. 

The Obama administration has shifted another $81 million dollars from the Department of Health and Human Services to continue development of a Zika vaccine in Phase 2 trials. Stage 1 is preclinical development, in labs and on animals. Stage 2 is when the vaccine is first tested on humans. This second stage proceeds first to study safety and then, if it passes, to effectiveness. 

In other news, ACOG (The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists) has updated its opinion on home births. New data has prompted the revision. The new Committee Opinion Document states that babies are twice as likely to die and more than three times as likely to have seizures soon after birth, compared to hospitals. I would point out that this is case even when most home birth attendants chose low risk patients to deliver at home. I would also point out that the literature on which this is based only reported on two of the worst outcomes, death and seizures. The many lesser but still significant complications like subsequent learning disability remain unquantified. 

In other sobering news, the US maternal death rate has increased. Between 2000 and 2014, the death rate increased from 19 per 100,000 to 24 per 100,000. It is unclear as to why though more thorough reporting methods are believed to account for much of the increase. However some of the increase is real, and authorities speculate that it is because women having babies are older and more likely to be obese than in the past. This gives rise to more complications such as maternal hypertension and diabetes. 

Many including me are cheering the relaxation of rules surrounding marijuana research. It is currently being used legally in several states without evidence of its effectiveness. New studies should be able to “ weed” out the legitimate from the bogus uses of which I suspect there are many. 

Stay tuned next week for more breaking news from the world of Obstetrics and Gynecology.

Medical Monday: Breaking News from the World of Obstetrics and Gynecology

Florida has an ongoing Zika outbreak in a Miami neighborhood of Wynwood. The CDC (Centers for Disease Control) has confirmed local transmission there for several days. In response, Florida Governor Scott has pledged that Zika tests will be free for all pregnant women. Apparently there is a Zika test kit shortage and physicians' offices have waiting lists for their use. Pregnant residents in Florida are beginning to curtain their activities and travel in their home towns. Other women are delaying pregnancies, freezing eggs for later, or leaving the area when pregnant.

California has the seen the first births of Zika infected babies. These cases have been from mothers who travelled to Zika affected areas. 

Texas Medicaid has decided to cover the cost of mosquito repellant to women of reproductive age. 

President Obama has asked Congress to reconvene early to work on Zika. Meanwhile the CDC has itself provided an additional  $16,000,000 to 40 states to combat Zika. They had already given $25,000,000 in July. This comes out to and additional $400,000 per state on average and does not sound like much in the scheme of things. The money is meant for developing programs to collect and track data on both the mothers and the babies affected by Zika. I have to say that when money is short, as it is, that making the choice to fight the virus with information seems like the wisest first step. When more money comes in, which hopefully it will, it can go to bigger ticket items like better mosquito control and vaccines. Current mosquito control techniques are poor against the mosquito since it can live indoors or outdoors, can hatch in a tiny amount of water, can bite multiple people, and has eggs which can last for months. 

The CDC has clarified that all pregnant women need to be assessed for risk of Zika. They do not necessarily need to be tested, but their travel history and the travel history of their partner or partners should be assessed. 

The CDC has reviewed data which show that the use of Long Acting Reversible Contraceptives (LARCS) is low in Zika affected States. LARCS are among the most effective means of contraception and considered safe for most all women. 

Finally in encouraging Zika news, The Journal Science has reported that three different Zika vaccines have worked “to perfection” in rhesus monkeys. Each of these vaccines works by a different mechanism to stimulate the immune system to combat the virus. One vaccine uses dead virus, but the other two use two different viral DNA subunits to stimulate an effective immune response. 

In other news, the CDC has reported that adults across the board are about 15 pounds heavier than they were 20 years ago. Boys and girls weigh more as well, though boys' heights have gone up. Girls' hights have stayed the same. The average 5’4 woman weighs 168.5 pounds, which qualifies as a BMI (Body Mass Index)  of 29, nearly going from overweight to obese at a BMI of 30. Normal BMI is somewhere between 19 and 25. See the NIH (National Institute of Health) BMI calculator HERE: 

http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health/educational/lose_wt/BMI/bmicalc.htm

Vitamin D is in the news again. Apparently Vitamin D levels decrease by 20 % after cessation of oral contraceptives (OCs). This has potential consequences not only for women but for any pregnancies that ensue. Because of his new finding, it might be appropriate to check Vitamin D levels after OCs are stopped or before pregnancy is considered. 

In the close-to-science-fiction department, we turn our attention to telomeres. What is a telomere ? Tasciences.com quotes Blackburn and Epel from the Journal Nature, saying that

“ Telomeres are the end caps at the end of each DNA strand that protect our chromosomes, like the plastic tips at the end of shoelaces. Without the coating, shoelaces become frayed until they can no longer do their job, just as without telomeres, DNA strands become damages, and our cells can’t do their job.”.

Telomere length is therefore a marker of cell aging. Cell lifespan shortens as telomeres shorten. We are born with a certain telomere length. The majority of telomere shortening occurs in the first 4 years of life. Little is known about why telomeres shorten. It turns out that early exclusive breastfeeding for just 4-6 weeks is associated with longer telomere length at age 4-5 years. This may have consequences for long term health and overall longevity. The CDC has reported that just about half of all postpartum women are breastfeeding at 6 months. Less than a third were still breastfeeding at a year. The American Academy of Pediatrics has recommended that women breastfeed for at least 6-12 months. 

The Journal Pediatrics reports that “ Breast milk give a boost to premature babies mental and physical development.” Those who received breast milk during the first 28 days of life had measurably better IQ, math, memory and motor skills at age 7 compared to those who received less breast milk. I will comment that to pump breast milk for 28 days while your premature baby is in the NICU (newborn ICU) requires a high level of dedication. Perhaps it is difficult to factor out this maternal dedication as a factor in the better outcomes of the breastfed babies in their study.  These breastfeeding mom’s of preemies either are or become some of the most dedicated and resourceful moms out there, due, at least in part, to what they have to deal with. Maybe the better outcomes are born of the mother’s overall dedication. Hat’s off to you…. dedicated NICU moms. 

 

Stay tuned for more breaking news from the world of Obstetrics and Gynecology next week on Medical Mondays.  

Medical Monday: Breaking News from the World of Obstetrics and Gynecology 

About 1.6 million pregnant women are at risk for Zika virus infection in South and Central  America. Now, health officials are concerned that local transmission of Zika virus has begun in southern Florida. This means the virus was acquired in Florida, instead of being acquired elsewhere while a person was traveling. This means that some of the mosquitos in Florida carry the virus.

In related news, the blood supply in South Florida is now considered to be potentially contaminated with Zika virus. The FDA ( Food and Drug Administration) has asked that all blood donations from South Florida halt until all donations can be screened for Zika virus.

In even more striking news, the CDC ( Centers for Disease Control)  is recommending that all pregnant women be screening for the Zika virus. 

As most of you know, Congress left for its seven week vacation without coming to an agreement on Zika funding. The President of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists has written a strongly worded letter to Congress on this matter. 

http://www.acog.org/About-ACOG/News-Room/Statements/2016/ACOG-Statement-on-Congress-Failure-to-Take-Action-on-Zika

Proceedings from the National Academy of Sciences include research that indicates that women who enter menopause early age faster than other women. They were able to quantify this, saying that menopause speeds up cellular again about 6 %. They also indicated that poor sleep can trigger similar aging type changes. 

In related news, women who start menstruation late and who have menopause late compared to average are more likely to achieve 90 years of age. Information like this is useful in that it helps identify factors tied to longevity. 

Research from the Journal Circulation has indicate that only 2.5 hours of moderate exercise per week has measurable effects on heart disease risk in women. Let’s see, taking one day off per week leave six days for exercise. Divide that into 2.5 hours to get the time per day needed for exercise. Only 25 minutes per day needed to reduce cardiac risk ! 

Stay tuned next week for more breaking news from the world of Ob/Gyn and women’s health.

Wellness Wednesday: Summer Safety Kit

Here is a convenient comprehensive kit to keep you safe this summer. It recaps some posts from the recent and more distant past, all in one convenient place and on the theme of having a safe and happy summer. 

Reclaim your Summer

This deals with the importance of time off and the concept of summer vacation for adults. 

Weathering the Heat

Contains some amazing facts and figures about heat stroke.

Five Steps to Mosquito Protection

This is especially important to review in this season of the Zika Virus.

Wellness While Gardening

Tells of the little known perils of playing in the dirt. 

Hydration 101

This critical post has concrete information to help you stay out of trouble this summer. 

 

Stay tuned for next week on Wellness Wednesday, when we will talk about the Summer of the Mind.  

Medical MondayL Breaking News from the World of Obstetrics and Gynecology

 

In Zika news, it has become clear that we do not yet know the length of time that Zika stays in the reproductive tract of a man. Thus, we do not now how long he may be able to transmit it sexually. 

In a recent poll, 73% of Americans feel Congress should pass the funding to fight the Zika virus as recommended by the Obama administration. However, reflecting a poor grasp of the situation, only 46% feel they need to pass it immediately. 

In the we already knew this department, ACOG ( American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists) has issued new evidence based guidelines to help prevent perineal lacerations. These include using episiotomy selectively, and well as using warm compresses before birth. 

SCOTUS ( Supreme Court of the United States) has struck down a restrictive Texas abortion law. This law would have required that abortions be provided at an ambulatory surgical center by a physician with hospital privileges. There is no scientific data saying that either of these elements is necessary for safety of the procedure, which is normally done in an office by a midlevel provider such as a nurse practitioner. Many abortion clinics would have had to close had this law stayed o the books. The Court ruled by a 5-3 vote largely along gender lines that these laws placed an undue burden to women seeking legal forms of health care. 

In other SCOTUS news, the Court has refused to hear a legal challenge to the Washington State rule that pharmacies must deliver all prescribed medications, even emergency contraception. This ends a nine year legal battle in which some pharmacists and a pharmacy refused to stock or fill the morning after pills. The Court voted 5 to 3 not to accept the case. Four Justices must agree to accept a case if it is to be heard. 

In the pendulum swings department, there are two items. First, Obs are giving serious consideration to the optimal time for delivery. In the past, 42 weeks was considered a reasonable time for induction. In my tenure, this has become 41 weeks. Now 39 weeks is under consideration. 

Secondly, women with a statistical risk of ovary cancer of 4% or more who is over 40 may be better off with her ovaries and tubes removed. When I finished residency in 1994, we encouraged women facing a hysterectomy to have the ovaries out as well if they were over 45. In recent years, this has become more of a patient choice. Now, we are refining this judgment to include family history and other risk factors in a statistical model to determine the best course, and it may favor removal of the ovaries earlier than previously recommended. 

Once again the USPTF (US Preventive Services Task Force) has cited the lack of evidence supporting the annual pelvic exam, and how it should be done only when symptoms are present. And yet, when examining their published statements, one sees that they do not highlight the fact that there has been nothing done to prove or disprove the utility of the exam either way. This is because doctors the world over have taken it as common sense to do the exam, thus no study has been done. The public should know that saying that there is no proof that something is not useful is NOT the same as saying that something has been proven TO BE not useful. Personally I find important things every week if not every day I do a pelvic exam, and that includes both speculum and bimanual exams. Furthermore, nobody is traumatized by their exam. Children and those with disabilities who need exams and who might be traumatized are examined with the aid of anesthesia supervision. 

 

Stay tuned next week for more breaking news from the world of Obstetrics and Gynecology.  

Medical Monday: Breaking news From the World of Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Women’s Health 

To follow recent tradition, I will give the Zika update first. The WHO (World Health Organization) has reported that the spectrum of neurological damage to babies with Zika is greater than previously appreciated. Microcephaly is certainly the most obvious problem, but others such as spasticity, seizures, and vision problems are possible. 

This week a new method of acquiring the virus was confirmed. An American lab worker working with the Zika virus has contracted it though a needle stick. 

In the US, funding is still not present to fund the fight against the virus. Nonetheless, scientists at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease (NIAID) are “aggressively pursuing" a vaccine. 

Research is also taking place regarding how to alter the genes of the Zika carrying mosquitos so that they are sterile. Wiping out an entire species through genetic engineering may have unintended consequences. Researchers are examining this important issue. 

Over thirteen hundred cases of Zika are confirmed in Puerto Rico, but there are probably many more including those who are asymptomatic. ACOG (American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists) is leading the effort to train physicians on the island to place IUDs for contraception. The WHO this week has finally issued a recommendation to women in affected areas to delay pregnancy. 

Both ovary and breast cancer therapies are in the news this week, and the messages are promising. For starters, research presented a the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology has highlighted 11 additional genetic mutations associated with increased risk of ovarian cancer. This may ultimately give us expanded opportunities for screening and treatment of this disease. 

On the treatment side, it turns out that a combination of IV and intraperitoneal chemotherapy is more life extending than either therapy alone, for the treatment of ovarian cancer. Also on the treatment side, it turns out that extending anti-cancer hormone therapy such as Tamoxifen for 10 instead of 5 years reduces risk of recurrence or second primary in older women with early stage breast cancer. 

Syphylis cases have more than tripled in the last decade. At the same time, the majority of sexually active women between 15-25 have NOT been screened EVER for any sexually transmitted infections since they do not believe themselves to be at risk.

The CDC ( Centers for Disease Control) has reported the “ the US obesity epidemic continues to worsen”. Fully 40% of US women are obese. Obese is defined as a body mass index (BMI) at or greater than 30. Do you know your BMI ? 

Medical Monday: Breaking News from the World of Obstetrics and Gynecology 

Congress has gone for a two and half week recess without coming to agreement on a budget to combat the Zika Virus. The CDC (Centers for Disease Control) plans on drawing from the emergency public health fund which will affect patient care all around the country. Florida is severely at risk

Medicaid has chipped in. The Department of Health and Human Services has announced that Medicaid funds can bet used to pay for mosquito repellant in the effort to control the spread of Zika.This will require a prescription. Medicaid will also cover all forms of birth control. 

One hundred and fifty health experts from several countries have called for the cancellation of the Summer Olympics in Rio De Janeiro this year. The CDC and the WHO (World Health Organization) have not taken this view and have made statements indicating it should go on. I am completely unsure of their reasoning. Zika virus acquired in Rio could spread to all the participating countries of the world, causing microcephaly and Guilaine Barre far and wide. 

Newer evidence is showing that sexual transmission of Zika is more common than previous thought. Moreover, Zika is now known to last longer in the body than previously thought. Because of this, people in a Zika affected area, but practice safe sex for 8 weeks, not 4, as previously recommended. Men with Zika must wait 6 months after clearing it before trying to conceive. A letter published in the New England Journal of Medicine presents a case where Zika seems to have been transmitted by a kiss and or oral sex.

ACOG (American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists) has started talking about the fourth trimester. This is, of course, the postpartum period. They are calling for physicians and patients to jointly craft a “ Postpartum care plan”. This is to include identification of the members of her postpartum care “team”, i.e. friends, family, and health professionals who will be able to help out. 

It’s true. There is “ mom brain”. But, it’s not what you think it is. New research out of the University of Colorado at Denver has shown that during pregnancy and the postpartum, the prefrontal cortex of the maternal brain reorganizes and increases it activity. This appears to translate into improved concentration. 

The WHO has come out with statements and guidelines in support of breastfeeding. They also issued controversial new recommendations to governments to restrict advertising of formula for children under three years of age. 

Maine legislature has approached new rules requiring lay midwives to meet certain minimal l education requirements and to be licensed by the state. This represents a step forward in the free for all that is home birth in this country. 

Menstrual migraines are real and we are beginning to crack their code. Researchers have discovered that estrogen levels fall unusually quickly right before the period in those who experience menstrual - timed migraine. This may point to effective therapies. 

The sale tax on tampons has been repealed by law in both Illinois and New York. The “ tampon tax” has been judged unfair to women, since that are the only gender who pays it. 

Teen pregnancy rates have fallen again to 22.3 live birth per 1000 teens ages 15-19. The CDC has identified the following likely reasons for the drop: "less sex, more contraceptive, and positive peer influence". 

I am starting to think that we each ought to contact our legislators about funding the fight against Zika. This thing may break open after these misbegotten Summer Olympics. 

 

Stay tuned next week, for more news from the world of Obstetrics and Gynecology. 

 

Medical Monday: Breaking News from the World of Obstetrics and Gynecology

Zika Virus was front and center at the annual meeting of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) this last week. Hospital protocols are being developed to handle Zika affected births. Additionally, research continues into the the way that the virus affects babies, some utilizing the placenta. 

The annual ACOG meeting also presented a medical legal panel which presented evidence that latest cluster of TRAP (targeted regulation of abortion providers) laws were not based on medical indications. Many such laws are introduced under the auspices of medical necessity, where the available medical literature does not indicate such. It seems to me that abortion opponents should be truthful about promoting pieces of legislation based on their moral and religious views, and not medical science, for which there is none. 

In Brazil, where Zika virus is rampant, abortion is illegal, even for anomalies. Recently, evangelical politicians there have introduced stricter penalties there for those who illegally are found to have aborted a baby with microcephaly. There are nearly one million illegal abortions in Brazil each year. The number of women who are hospitalized for complications from these illegal abortions is ten times the number of women who are not. 

Oklahoma just passed a law making it illegal to have an abortion. It is a felony there, punishable by up to three years in prison. Physicians performing abortions would have their medical license revoked. 

And no matter where you stand on the issue of abortion, it comes as good news that abortions in the US and other developed countries have significantly declined since the 1990s. In my experience, abortion is a tough decision for people and is fairly hard on women. 

Also in the good news department, new research in JAMA (Journal of the American Medical Association) indicated that exercise wards of a variety of different types of cancer, even in those who smoke or are obese. There is a 20 % risk reduction for about 13 different types of cancers including esophagus, lung, kidney, stomach, endometrium and others. 

And in some news which I consider to be outstandingly good news, a panel at ACOG has generated a strong statement of consensus that 39 weeks is the optimal time to delivery a baby.  They have stated that there is little to gain and considerable to lose thereafter. We Ob/Gyns are committed to practicing evidence based medicine, and so I have managed patients according to the existing algorithms of the day supported by the best available evidence at the time. But, as my 22 years of practice have ticked by, I have had a stronger and stronger hunch about this 39 week point. Now there is finally a high level consensus about it. The presentation was so strong the the 63% opposed to the consensus before the talk turned into a 81% for the consensus by the end of the meeting. Inductions at 39 weeks had a lower complication rate than previously appreciated, and the C section rate did not increase. 

The vaccine rate for HPV (Human papilloma virus) has been low in this country. However, it is more than it has been in last years, and the rates of high risk HPV disease are decreasing. To really stamp out cervical cancer, we need to achieve the so-called “herd immunity” conferred by near universal vaccination. 

More good news…. In 2010, 16 % of Americans were uninsured. In 2015 this dropped to 9.1 % of Americans. Of course this is related to the ACA, the Affordable Care Act. Of course this has a cost. But, as a physician, I would like to remind the non-medical public that it is much cheaper for the taxpayer to pay for early prevention of illness and pregnancy than to pay for delayed treatment of illness and unintended pregnancy. 

Stay tuned for more breaking news from the work of Obstetrics and Gynecology next week on Medical Monday. 

 

Belated Medical Monday : Breaking News form the World of Obstetrics and Gynecology

A new inexpensive paper based rapid test for Zika has been introduced. This represents progress, but it’s accuracy remains to be determined. More recently, it has been discovered that testing urine for Zika is even more sensitive than blood. Good news for low cost testing ! 

Researchers are endeavoring to discover how the Zika virus does its damage. As in the case of many disease processes, the immune system seems to be mediating. Zika first affects the placenta by limiting the growth of placental blood vessels. It then moves to the fetal brain where, the immune response to the virus turns off a gene needed for fetal brain cells to specialize. 

Also of interest: there are pairs of twins who are unequally affected by Zika. In some cases, one twin develops microcephaly and one twin does not. Findings like this might lead to clues about how to test for, prevent or treat the condition. 

The United Nations has set up their own fund to combat Zika. Sixty -one countries are now affected by the virus. The National Governors Association in the United States has calling on Congress to strike a deal on emergency funding for Zika. It has been 2 months since President Obama initially requested the $1.9 billion though to be necessary to fight the virus. 

The safety of the widely used anti-nausea drug Zofran was questioned last year after a piece of research was released. A newer study from the Journal Reproductive Toxicology has found no connection to birth defects. In fact, it has also found that women who used Zofran were less likely to have a miscarriage or stillbirth. 

Outspoken Ob/Gyn and former clinical instructor at Harvard, Dr. Amy Tuteur has pointed out how the natural birth industry has fostered guilt and shame among those who have required or who chose medical interventions for labor and delivery. These interventions include pain relief, hospital birth and C sections. Most of these interventions are done in the service of the health and well being of the mother and baby. Dr. Tuteur points out that some may have lost sight of these fundamental goals. Anyone wishing to hear more of her opinions (which are as sharp as her scalpel) should go to http://www.skepticalob.com

The chair of Illinois ACOG Dr. Maura Quinlin is trying to address the rise in home birth by bringing parties together to craft regulations to guide the practice. Chief among them is the need to restrict the practice to “ low risk women”. My position on this is that this is a first step; but that many women with complications start as low risk, and that they go from complicated to uncomplicated in the blink of an eye.

Most home birth midwives in the US are not Certified Nurse Midwives, who have years of graduate level education and hospital training. Most home birth midwives in other developed countries are. This is one reason behind the disparities in safety data between the US and other countries. The president of the American College of Nurse-Midwives and the president of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists are working to establish educational competencies for midwives practicing in the US in order to bring them up to the standards in the rest of the world. 

Findings recently presented at the annual meeting of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists have shown some alarming facts associated with home birth. Women with prior C section who opted for home birth, even those attended by Certified Nurse Midwives, had a greatly increased risk (10X) of infants with serious medial conditions including seizures and neurological dysfunction (brain damage). Additionally, home birth VBACS ( vaginal births after C sections)  attended by midwives have a much higher risk of Apgar scores of 0—5. Earlier data referenced on my site has shown a greatly increased incidence of first Apgar of 0 for first deliveries at home. 

Maryland is moving forward with the “ Contraceptive Equity Act” , prohibiting copays and preauthorization requirements for contraceptives. Insurers have until 1-1-18 to comply. Hopefully more states and countries will follow suit. 

The chair of the Michigan section of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists has noted that numerous pieces of legislation have been introduced in recent years that aim to govern the practice of medicine for women. These have had to do with everything from reproductive and contraceptive care, to breast surveillance and even ultrasounds. She is encouraging the public to be wary about this. I would say it like this: Be wary of politicians who want to practice medicine without a license, especially if they only seem to want to do so on women’s bodies. 

The Missouri house last week debated a bill that would assign the fetus full personhood. Further south of Missouri, past the Mason Dixon line, mosquitos capable of carrying the Zika virus are plentiful. This is where the virus will have its greatest effect in the US. However, it is also the part of the US where reproductive services are harder to procure. The southern states, especially Florida and Texas have had some of the largest funding cuts to contraceptive services of any states in the union. They also have some of the higher rates of unintended pregnancy. In what should be a source of statewide embarrassment,  Florida cut Planned Parenthood clinics out of Medicaid funding, but now is crying for more Federal Aid (your tax dollars) to combat Zika. That’s some nerve.  

Medical Monday: Breaking News from the World of Obstetrics and Gynecology 

A startling report by the Pan American Health Organization has reported that Zika can be carried by the Mosquito Aedes Albopictus, also known as the Asian Tiger mosquito. This is important since before this, we only thought it could be carried by Aedes Aegyptae, which has a much more restricted range. The potential northern reach of Zika pay be much farther than previously believed. (See map.) 

Testing for a Zika virus vaccine is slated to begin in September of this year.  

In other good news, there may be another strategy toward curbing the spread of Zika by mosquitos. Apparently, infecting a mosquito with a bacteria called Wolbachia makes it less likely to get Zika. It is hoped that Wolbachia colonized mosquitos will infect the entire population of mosquitos, displacing Zika.  

Hypertensive disorders of pregnancy such as preeclampsia, also known as toxemia, appear to have some modifiable risk factors. These would include diabetes, obesity, cholesterol levels, pre-pregnancy blood pressure levels, and the incidence of binge drinking. These factors should be targeted and improved before pregnancy to minimize the chance of preeclampsia. 

A retrospective study published in the journal Pediatrics has revealed that women who get flu vaccine in pregnancy protect their babies as well. Those babies whose mother received flu vaccine turned out to be 70% less likely to get the flu. Among those babies whose mothers had received the flu vaccine who did get the flu, they were 80% less likely to require hospitalization. 

An English study from the Journal of Adolescent Health has revealed that 3/4 of girls from ages 11-18 have listed breast related concerns as reasons for dropping out of sports. Other data has showed that 72 % of women have experienced exercise related breast pain. And yet only 10% of girls in the survey were wearing a sports bra prevent this. The study also queried girls about their knowledge about breast heath and development. 90% said they wanted to know more.The survey showed that the favored solution was a females only health class with a female teacher sometime around age 11. 

New research presented at the annual meeting go the Pediatric Academic Societies shows that HPV is associated with a twofold increased risk of self destructive escape behaviors such as cigarette smoking, marijuana, and use of alcohol. I wonder if this means we should begin pap and HPV screening on young women with these behaviors sooner than the recommended 21 years of age ? 

Normal weight people who ate 25 % less than they wanted were studied for two years. Research published in Journal of the American Medical Association Internal Medicine has shown that after two years, they were happier, less stressed, slept better, and had better sex drives that their counterparts who ate all they wanted. My guess is that this habit generated a sense of mastery, which transferred over to other areas of the test subject's lives. The study also showed that test subjects lost weight, from what had to be the high range of normal to about 22.6, the lower side of normal in Body Mass Index (BMI) 

Ever hear the term “ reproductive coercion “? Neither had I. However, I have heard of a phenomenon where men pressure women to get pregnant against their wishes. It can involve the sabotage of birth control and is highly associated with physical abuse. A recent study among sexually active high school girls in New York has shown that gives as young as 14 report reproductive coercion.  This problem is just coming to light. 

In related news, women serving in the military have been noted to have trouble obtaining their prescribed birth control. Perhaps related to this is the higher rate of unplanned pregnancy in the military compared to the general population. Is this reproductive coercion? Not exactly. 

In the “ I had no idea “ department, it appears that 1 in 6 hospital beds in the US are in Catholic affiliated hospitals. This percentage has increased in recent years. In these hospitals, there are, of course, no abortions performed. However, health care staff are also advised not to promote contraception, and not to perform sterilizations. Is this reproductive coercion ? 

 

Stay tuned for more breaking news from the world of Ob/Gyn, here, next week, on Medical Monday. 

 

 

 

Medical Monday: Breaking News from the World of Obstetrics and Gynecology 

As per recent precedent, we will be starting with Zika virus news.

NIAID ( National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease) chair Dr. Anthony Fauci has reported that Zika virus has yet another disease manifestation in non pregnant adults. Besides producing microcephaly in the unborn, and Guillaine Barre partial paralysis in a certain number of adults, it also produces significant neurological damage to what appears to be a small percentage of adults. More information will doubtless be forthcoming. 

Many have wondered why the virus, which was identified many years ago, had not caused problems on this scale, before. The answer is most likely lies in the fact that it has mutated since it was a harmless strain in Africa. It is interesting to note that this information comes to us through a collaboration between UCLA and the Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College. 

CDC ( Centers for Disease Control) had recommended that men with symptoms who have been in a Zika infected area abstain or use condoms for 1 least 6 months. Men without symptoms must take these precautions for 2 months. That said, it is also true that 4 out of 5 people with Zika do NOT show symptoms. Hmmmm….

It is becoming more appreciated that Zika related changes in the fetal brain may require sophisticated imaging like antenatal MRI to diagnose. In other words, a woman may not find out until late in pregnancy that her baby is affected. It is important to keep in mind the big picture that most pregnant women with Zika give birth to what now appear to be normal babies. However, there has not been enough time to determine what percent are born normal, or how long or intensively one needs to observe the child before the child is declared normal. 

In other, but ultimately related news,CMS, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, has warned officials in all 50 states that ending Medicaid funding of Planned Parenthood may be out of compliance with federal law. Ten states, Alabama, Arizona, Louisiana, Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma, Texas, and Wisconsin have already cut off funding or have passed legislation to do so. CMS has sent letters to each state to “ ensure they have a clear understanding of their obligation to follow longstanding Medicaid law guaranteeing that beneficiaries have the right to receive covered services, including family planning services…” Failure to comply with result in another warning, then penalties ($). 

With weather experts predicating a hotter than average spring and summer, Zika carrying mosquitos are expected to expand their territory in the southern states. Legislators and activists in these states had better think hard about taking away family planning clinics which are principal access points for contraceptives. Ready access to contraceptives may become very important if Zika outbreaks develop in these southern states, which doubtless they will.  To put it very plainly, less access to contraception means more unplanned pregnancy, and in the setting of a Zika outbreak, more potential for Zika affected pregnancy, and thus more potential for seriously affected fetuses, and more demand for abortion. 

As many states are developing legislations to make abortion procedures more restrictive, other groups are promoting the use of abortion medication, which in many cases of early pregnancy, would make abortion procedures unnecessary. At the same time others are promoting “ Perinatal Hospice Care” as another way to avoid abortion, even of babies with fatal anomalies. These facilities would provide end of life care for babies born with conditions not compatible with long term survival. This would include babies with severe chromosome anomalies, severe brain defects, and other abnormalities like the congenital absence of kidneys. The appearance of these facilites coincides with the appearance of legislation in 6 states which requires physicians to counsel expectant parents with an unborn baby with a fatal condition about Perinatal Hospice as an alternative to abortion. In other words, they are advising the parents that they MAY continue to carry the pregnancy, give birth and then place their child in a hospice until it dies. I speculate that facilites of this type are bound to arise in South America where abortion is neither widely accepted nor available, and where there will soon be thousands of severely brain damaged babies due to the Zika virus. 

Now for more virus related news. Polio vaccine has been revised. There have only been 12 cases worldwide, and this latest step should eradicate it once and for all. It is important to note that the world once feared polio as we now fear Zika. 

Gardisil,  the quadrivalent vaccine against HPV (Human Papilloma Virus) has been extremely helpful to curtail HPV disease. It reduces the onset of cervical cancer by 63% and death by 43 %. However, Gardisil 9, which covers 9 HPV subtypes rather than 4, would decrease the same by 73% and 49%, respectively. This vaccine upgrade is estimated to be worth $27 billion in health care savings over the next 35 years, not to speak of the reduction in human suffering. 

Finally, in the awesome news department, women who work out while pregnant seem to confer significant lasting benefits to the cardiovascular and brain function of their unborn children. ACOG (American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists) continues to recommend that women with uncomplicated pregnancies do MODERATE exercise before, during and after pregnancy to benefit themselves and their children. 

Stay tuned for more breaking news from the world of Obstetrics and Gynecology, next week, on Medical Monday. 

Medical Monday: Breaking News from the World of Obstetrics and Gynecology 

Good Monday.

First the Zika news. Dr. Anne Schuchat, the principal deputy director of the CDC (Centers for Disease Control) has stated that "everything we look at with this virus seems to be a bit scarier than we initially thought”, noting that "the virus has been linked to a broader array of birth defects throughout a longer period of pregnancy, including premature birth and blindness in addition to the smaller brain size caused by microcephaly”. Additionally, she announced that "the mosquito that carries the Zika virus is present in 30 states, more than twice what officials originally thought. The maps at right indicated the territory of these mosquitos. Click on the image to take you to the CDC site on the subject. 

The White House has shifted nearly $589 million or over half a billion dollars in leftover Ebola funds in order to fight the Zika virus. This comes well short of the $1.9 billion that has been requested by the National Institute on Allergy and Infectious Diseases. Dr. Anthony Fauci, the Director of this organization has announced that he will also be diverting funds from other areas in order to close the gap on funding what he views as critical efforts.

Florida leads the nation in number of Zika cases which last week totaled 84. Zika cases in Florida account for 23% of all cases in the states. Mosquito activity is of course greater in warm climates. It is expected that when the rest of the southern part of the country achieves these temperatures that Zika transmission will increase. The CDC has reiterated that insect repellent containing DEET are safe to use at any stage of pregnancy.

Zika is now associated a third clearcut disease entity. We already know a fair amount about microcephaly which is incurred by the fetus when a pregnant woman acquires a Zika infection during pregnancy. We also know about Guillain-Barré syndrome, post viral paralysis, which can effect of minority of people after a Zika infection. Researchers in Brazil are now reporting that the virus may be linked to "an autoimmune disorder known as acute disseminated encephalomyelitis or ADEM. In this syndrome neurological symptoms could start right away or as long as two weeks later. 

New research from the CDC indicates that white women between the ages of 30s and 50s are dying at increasing rates. This is been attributed to poor access to healthcare in rural America. In related news, a new study from Delaware has indicated that women enrollees in their state Medicaid program outnumber men to 2 to 1. State officials are interpreting this as an indication of increased poverty among women.

California has expanded the care that pharmacists are able to give. Perhaps most significantly, they are now able to prescribe contraceptives without the patient having to visit to another caregiver. While three quarters of physicians in one poll do not support the dispensing of birth control by a pharmacist, the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists support this legislation wholeheartedly.

Delaware has modified its Medicaid policy to require that contraceptive costs be bundled with the hospital’s charge for obstetric care. The Governor of the state, Jack Markell, recently wrote an op-ed for the New York Times describing this change and indicating his belief that it would allow for better family planning. He also went on to argue that contraception is vital to prosperity. 

The Guttmacher Institute recently released a study showing that teen abortion and pregnancy rates have dropped to historic lows. Teen pregnancy rates in particular have been cut in half between the years 1990 and 2011. The teen pregnancy rate in 2011 was 52.4 per thousand and, also of interest, is nearly 25% lower than the rate in 2008.

 

That seems like plenty to think about this week. Stay tuned next week for more news from the amazing world of Ob/Gyn. 

 

 

Medical Monday: Breaking News form the World of Obstetrics and Gynecology

Good Monday ! We will start our news this morning with a revelation that a once deadly virus is now under firm control via the three pronged approach of surveillance, treatment and vaccination ! I speak, of course of the Human Papilloma Virus,(HPV), responsible for causing cervical dysplasia and cervical cancer.

A new CDC study published in The Journal of pediatrics reports states that" thanks to a vaccination program that began decade ago fewer US women are entering adulthood infected with” HPV. Apparently this study is the first to show falling levels of dangerous strains of the virus in women in their 20s. Human papilloma virus vaccine also known as Gardisil, has been available for use for children ages 9 through 26 for many years now. It was initially only available for girls because the studies were done first on girls but subsequently it was released also to boys. 

Zika is our newest viral threat. It has ravaged South and Central America and proceeds northward into areas where the Aedes aegypti mosquito can live. Zika is blood borne and spread by this mosquito. Male to female sexual transmission of ZIka is now also confirmed. It is also vertically transmitted, meaning from mother to unborn child, and is strongly linked to the development of microcephaly in the the growing fetus, which produces severe brain damage. Conclusive proof of the connection is likely to come in June when a large cohort of nearly 5000 women mostly in Columbia will give birth.

Zika infection is also a threat to the nonpregnant in that it is strongly associated with a much higher risk of developing post viral paralysis, Known as a Guillain-Barré syndrome. World Health Organization researchers note that there is been a spike of Guillain-Barre "everywhere that we are seeing to seek a virus".

In the good news department, breast cancer survivors are now believed to be able to safely use vaginal estrogen therapy. Vaginal estrogen therapy is used to treat vaginal atrophy, often see in menopause or after breast cancer treatments which stop a woman from producing estrogen. Vaginal atrophy is a painful condition which causes various problems and prohibits intercourse. We do not give systemic estrogen to breast cancer survivors since we are concerned it could encourage a cancer recurrence. Vaginal treatments are not believed to produce a systemic dose. 

In more good news, a cheap easy to use vaginal ring is helping to curb HIV transmission rates in Africa. The rings slowly releases an antiviral drug to combat HIV and it needs to be changed every 4 weeks. It reduces transmission by 30 %. 

In concerning news, preeclampsia in pregnancy seems to be associated with a measurable risk of cardiovascular disease later in life. The effect is so pronounced, that left ventricular functional abnormalities can be seen on imaging family soon after delivery. 

Also concerning is new research indicating that breast cancer risk may be increased in those with hyperthyroidism. 

Finally, in the news-that-sounds-like-science-fiction department, the first uterus transplant in America has been performed. The recipient is 26 years old. She will have to wait year before attempting In vitro fertilization. If she succeeds, she will be permitted to keep her uterus for one of two children and then it will be removed.