Background: The period following contraception saw an increase in the prevalence of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), drug-resistant tuberculosis, and lung cancer. As a result, COPD is associated with a significant economic burden, including hospitalization, time away from work, and disability. The goal is to find an altruistic relationship between contraception, rising environmental estrogen, and respiratory diseases [if any].
Methods: Bioinformatics analysis was performed on a random sample of 20-35 years, 35-50 years, 50-70 years, and >70 years. Results: Contraceptive users had a 4 fold increase in respiratory pathologies compared to people who did not use contraception; chronic obstructive pulmonary disease had a 75-80 fold increase in contraceptive users, with a 40-fold increase in smokers who used contraception and a 40-50 fold increase in people who did not use contraception. contraception but nonsmokers in the 35-50 and 50-70 age groups; Tuberculosis destroying lungs, tuberculous pneumonia of entire lung, despite antituberculous (drug resistance) treatment, was seen in people using contraception by a 15-30 fold increase; Lung Cancer was seen with a 5-15 fold increase in contraceptive users aged 20-50 years.
Conclusion: Abortion has resulted in innocent aborted blood, contraceptive menstrual blood stained environmental pollution with hypoxia (obnoxious inhalational, exogenous stimuli), evidenced by rise in environmental estrogen; combined with smashed fragmentation of millions of germ cells every day, decreased endogenous estrogen resulting in defaulted genomic repertoire neoplastic, autoimmune, and respiratory pathologies; contraception reversal to autologous germ cell replant effect, restored hormonal surveillance, and regresses all diseases Prohibiting abortions will reduce the environmental pollution caused by aborted blood, resulting in fewer lung cancers, pulmonary diseases, and tuberculosis.
Author (s) Details
Elizabeth JeyaVardhini Samuel
Department of Medicine, Karpagam Faculty of Medical Sciences and Research, Madras University, Kanagachettikulam, Kalapet, Pondicherry 605014, India.
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