CLASSIFICATION OF MENSTRUAL CYCLES IN PRE- AND PERIMENOPAUSAL WOMEN

1981 ◽  
Vol 91 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
MARY G. METCALF ◽  
R. A. DONALD ◽  
J. H. LIVESEY

Urine for the analysis of pregnanediol, oestrogens, FSH and LH, was collected weekly from 50 normal menstruant women. Twenty of these women were aged ≥ 40 years and had a history of regular menstrual cycles; they are termed premenopausal. The other 30 reported a recent break in regular cyclicity and are termed perimenopausal. All menstrual cycles observed in the premenopausal women were ovulatory in type and 25–30 days in length. The 124 cycles observed in the perimenopausal women were 18–260 days in length (median, 29 days), with 52% of the ovulatory type. To describe this diversity, a systematic classification is proposed based on (1) the excretion of pregnanediol in the 12 days preceding menstruation (classes I–IV), (2) gonadotrophin output (categories A–E, and L), and (3) the length of the menstrual cycle in days. The premenstrual surge of pregnanediol was greatest in class I cycles and diminished progressively until it became undetectable in class IV. Gonadotrophin excretion was lowest in category A cycles and increased progressively until all levels were within the postmenopausal range by category E. In cycles of category L only LH (and not FSH) was raised. In the perimenopausal women 37 cycles included episodes of high gonadotrophin excretion (categories C–L), a phenomenon which was not seen in the premenopausal women. These cycles were usually longer than 50 days and were often anovulatory in type (classes II—IV). Typically they began with the high gonadotrophin levels and the low oestrogens which characterize the postmenopausal state, and ended after a rise in oestrogen output to levels ≥ 70 nmol/24 h. It is concluded that 'anovulatory' cycles and cycles in which there are 'postmenopausal' levels of FSH and LH are common in the perimenopause and that they are rare in premenopausal women.

1985 ◽  
Vol 104 (1) ◽  
pp. 137-141 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. G. Metcalf ◽  
J. A. Mackenzie

ABSTRACT It is claimed that the exposure of women to oestrogens unopposed by progesterone increases the risk of breast cancer. Despite indirect evidence in support of this claim, the impracticability of monitoring oestrogen and progesterone levels in large numbers of women for prolonged periods of time has meant that no direct demonstration of the effect has been made. A possible technique is suggested. The ratio (R) of oestrogens to pregnanediol in urine has been used as an index of oestrogen exposure relative to progesterone. Samples were collected at weekly intervals on 700 occasions from 30 perimenopausal women, and on 519 occasions from 66 women with a history of regular menstrual cyclicity. Unusually prolonged episodes of unopposed high oestrogen excretion (R ≥ 100 for ≥ 2 successive weeks) were observed on 30 occasions in 15 of the perimenopausal women and on four occasions in the other women. In the perimenopausal group, these episodes occurred in 46·9% of the 32 menstrual cycles which were longer than 50 days compared with 6·9% of the 72 cycles which were shorter than 35 days (P < 0·001). The association of prolonged episodes of unopposed high oestrogen excretion with long menstrual cycles suggests the possibility of using menstrual cycle length as an index of oestrogen exposure during the menopausal transition. J. Endocr. (1985) 104, 137–141


2007 ◽  
pp. 18-26
Author(s):  
Dmytro V. Bazyk

At the present stage of scientific research, one of the undefined problems in religious studies is, first of all, the problem of the expediency and relevance of the use of the term "primitive religions" or "primitive religious beliefs" in relation to both representatives of Aboriginal peoples of the present and the analysis of the development of religions in the history of forms of religion. discovered in general. The problem of determining the original religion and its forms of expression is somewhat compounded by the fact that the use of special terminology in theoretical developments depends not only on the various features of research methodological approaches, but also on the language in which studies are commonly published. Therefore, the use of one or the other terminology requires the isolation of a possible synonym for relatively adequate nomination (naming) of these religious manifestations.


2021 ◽  
Vol 27 (3) ◽  
pp. 148-154
Author(s):  
Natalia A. Guz ◽  
Yulia G. Babicheva

The purpose of the work is to explore the point of view in Vasily Shukshin's short stories in its systematic and diverse manifestation. Topicality is provided by the exceptional significance of this category in narratology. The study of the point of view based on the material of short stories by Vasily Shukshin has been conducted for the first time. The article briefly traces the history of scientific understanding of the category of point of view in foreign and Russian philology and notes the variety of approaches and definitions in the formulation of the concept. The authors use the classification of Boris Uspenskij for analysis and consider the point of view in Vasily Shukshin's short stories in psychological, ideological (evaluative), spatial-temporal and phraseological terms. The positions of Boris Korman, Yuri Lotman, Wolf Schmid and Franz Karl Stanzel also take into account. The authors note the features of Vasily Shukshin's narration that affect the expression of the point of view in the text. Vasily Shukshin's short stories are characterised by a dynamic and frequent change of points of view, which indicates the technique of “montageˮ and similarities in this regard with cinematic techniques. The conclusions generalise the variety of ways and forms of expression of the point of view in the studied artistic material. The point of view in the considered stories is characterised by variability in the correlation of subjects of speech and subjects of consciousness, alternation of external and internal points of view, mutual transitions from one to the other, text interference and other hybrid phenomena.


2010 ◽  
Vol 33 (5) ◽  
pp. 402-403 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert M. Seyfarth ◽  
Dorothy L. Cheney

AbstractAmong monkeys and apes, both the recognition and classification of individuals and the recognition and classification of vocalizations constitute discrete combinatorial systems. One system maps onto the other, suggesting that during human evolution kinship classifications and language shared a common cognitive precursor.


2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (99) ◽  
pp. 130-137
Author(s):  
ANNA Y. LUKINA

This article deals with a new diasystemic approach to studying the variation of verb forms in the history of the French language. The author describes two variations - diatopic and diachronic. The new diasystemic approach allows us to build a classification of the verb form variants taking into account the intra- and extralinguistic criteria: historical, geographical and stylistic. Horizontal and vertical studying of variation in verb forms (L. A. Stanova's method) helps to identify the main trends in the evolution of the French language, on the one hand, and the characteristic features inherent in one or another regional written tradition, script, on the other.


Apeiron ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 48 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Chad Wiener

AbstractMost scholars of Aristotle’s biology have accepted the view of D. M. Balme and Pierre Pellegrin that the History of Animals is devoid of any systematic classification of animals. I challenge this reading. I show that Aristotle can produce a taxonomy of animals kinds that are found in the essences of atomic species, or, to borrow from Plato, divide nature by the joints. I start from Aristotle’s positive views of division stated in APo. II.13–14 and how they imply a taxonomic order of a genus. I then develop my interpretation of how Aristotle can divide nature by the joints in respect to his criticisms of division in APr. I.31 paired with the methodology developed in APr. I.27–30. I conclude by illustrating that Aristotle employs this methodology to divide the genus animal by its joints in the History of Animals and how he seeks out the taxonomic order of the genus animal in that work.


LingVaria ◽  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maciej Grochowski

The Evolution of Criteria for a Grammatical Classification of Lexemes (Relative Pronouns vs Conjunctions) The paper discusses the evolution of the part-of-speech classification of Polish lexemes, and presents the changes in the criteria used to distinguish relative pronouns and conjunctions. The characterization has been based on important works in the field of theoretical Polish grammar, including textbooks, from the beginning of the 20th to the beginning of the 21st century. The author distinguishes two breakthroughs in the history of grammar, the first caused by the influence on research into grammar of the connotation theory, and the other by the influence of the metatext theory.


Zootaxa ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 5047 (3) ◽  
pp. 247-272
Author(s):  
ESPRIT HEESTAND SAUCIER ◽  
SCOTT C. FRANCE ◽  
LES WATLING

Bamboo corals are distinguished from most other octocorals by an articulated skeleton. The nodes are proteinaceous and sclerite-free while the internodes are composed of non-scleritic calcium carbonate. This articulation of the skeleton was thought to be unique and a strong synapomorphy for the family Isididae. Our phylogeny, based on the amplification of mtMutS and 18S, shows an articulating skeleton with sclerite-free nodes has arisen independently at least five times during the evolutionary history of Octocorallia rather than being a synapomorphy characteristic of a monophyletic bamboo coral clade. The family Isididae is currently composed of four subfamilies (Circinisidinae, Isidinae, Keratoisidinae, and Mopseinae). Not only is the family polyphyletic, but our genetic analyses suggest also the subfamily Isidinae is polyphyletic based on current taxonomic classifications, and Mopseinae is not monophyletic. The type, Isis, is found outside of the well-supported Calcaxonia – Pennatulacea clade where the other members of Isididae cluster. The current classification of the family Isididae does not reflect the evolutionary history of an articulated skeleton. To better reflect the evolutionary history of these taxa we propose that three of the four the subfamilies, the genus Isidoides, and genera within the subfamily Isidinae, be elevated to family level to produce a classification with five families with a bamboo-like skeleton: Chelidonisididae, Isididae, Isidoidae, Keratoisididae, and Mopseidae.  


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