Background: Following the implementation of contraception and abortion in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, there was an unexplained increase in the prevalence of kidney illnesses.
The goal is to find an altruistic
association between the rise in the prevalence of kidney disorders – metabolic
syndrome – and the use of contraception as a possible cause [if any].
Methods: In 2012, a retrospective analysis of the prevalence of renal diseases
in 350 patients aged 20-35 years, 35-50 years, and >50 years, based on data
collected by convenient, stratified random sampling from various geographical
locations between 2003 and 2012, and its association with contraception,
abortion, and other variables was conducted, including many variables;
concurrently, serum oestrogen levels were measured. From 1989 to 2012, clinical
practise identified 403 people with a variety of disorders after consuming fish
without scales or gills, 97 of whom had nephritis, and they were also
investigated for a link to contraceptive status.
Results: Contraception was linked to a 2.5-4 fold increase in renal diseases in
people aged 20 to 50 years [p0.0005] and a 1.5 fold increase in people aged
>50 years [p0.025]; consumption of fish without scales or gills [prawns,
crabs, shellfish] combined with contraception was linked to a 30- 40 fold
increase in renal diseases in people aged 20 to 50 years [p0.0005].
Conclusion: Contraception causes smashed, agonising fragmentation of germ
cells, with negative feedback to the hypothalamic pituitary axis, resulting in
decreased endogenous oestrogen or androgen, defaulted genomic repertoire,
deranged cell metabolism, and cell cycle, and increased degeneration with cons.
After fibrosis, a 275 percent increase in the incidence of diseases, including
renal pathology, is noted; after hysterectomy, a 500 percent increase in the
prevalence of diseases is observed.
Author (s) Details
Elizabeth JeyaVardhini Samuel
Department of General Medicine, Pondicherry Institute of Medical Sciences, India.
View Book :- https://stm.bookpi.org/HMMS-V8/article/view/2173
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