Archive for effects

Pregnancy can have different effects in the woman’s overall health condition. Most pregnant women can notice some changes in the gums throughout pregnancy, including redness and bleeding of the gums when brushing the teeth. In addition, some women can experience severe bleeding and swelling. These changes are known pregnancy gingivitis that usually starts on the second month of the pregnancy. Pregnancy gingivitis tends to increase around eight month and may decrease after giving birth.

This condition is usual in the front area of the mouth. The symptoms of pregnancy gingivitis are the same with the common gingivitis but may have different causes. Progesterone level in the body during pregnancy can reach up to ten percent higher than the normal level, which can improve certain bacterial growth that results to gingivitis. In addition, during pregnancy, the immune system works differently, which can change the body’s reaction to bacteria.

To be able to reduce pregnancy gingivitis effects, it is best to have a good oral hygiene. Brushing your teeth at least two times a day for two minutes is recommended. Make sure to floss every day as well. Antimicrobial mouthwash is advisable to prevent gum infection. Some doctors suggest that rinses that have no alcohol content are better though there is no proof that alcohol-based mouthwash may have bad effects on pregnancy.

During pregnancy, it is important to visit your dentist to check your oral health especially the condition of your gums. Pregnancy gingivitis can be treated using professional cleaning, which can be performed anytime in your pregnancy especially on the second trimester. However, advanced and aggressive treatments including periodontal surgery are not recommended until after giving birth.

Another effect of pregnancy in oral health is pregnancy granuloma or pyogenic granuloma, also known as pregnancy tumor. Two to ten percent of pregnant women may suffer from this condition, which is a growth in the gums. Though it is also called pregnancy tumor, it is not cancerous and dangerous. Pregnancy granuloma usually develops in the second trimester or pregnancy where red nodules that are commonly found in the upper gum line. However, red nodules can be found anywhere in the mouth as well. These nodules can easily bleed, which can form a crust or ulcer.

Pregnancy granuloma causes are still unknown but poor oral hygiene is usually a main factor. Blood vessel malformations, trauma, viruses and hormones can also be factors of the condition.

Tooth loss is also a common condition for pregnant women due to sever morning sickness or frequent vomiting, which can affect the enamel of the front teeth. It is necessary to contact your dentist if you are experiencing frequent vomiting to know different medications to prevent tooth erosion.

Dry mouth is also an effect of pregnancy. You can prevent dry mouth through drinking water and having hard cadies that are free from sugar or sugarless gum to help in the stimulation of the saliva.

On the other hand, excessive saliva can also be an effect or pregnancy though it is less common, which happens in the early stages of pregnancy. Excessive saliva may be connected to nausea.

Women who are planning to get pregnant should visit a dentist for oral checkup and treatment. Gums and teeth needs special attention during pregnancy, so right nutrition and regular brushing is important.

To learn about the importance of periodontal examination and to understand how Pregnancy affects dental health, visit our website to get answers straight from qualified dentists at http://www.cosmeticdentistryguide.co.uk

Article from articlesbase.com

Categories : 2nd Trimester
Comments (0)

The physical effects of stress on women are often discussed, especially among women themselves. Even as they cause themselves by responding with anxiety to the thought of the physical effects of stress on women, they increase those effects. As a woman, I have often sat in a group, each member of which seemed bent on proving that she suffered more physical effects of stress than the others.

Physical Effects of Stress on Women When It Is Distress

Physical effects of stress on women when that stress is negative distress include health concerns such as backache, shoulder and neck pain, headache, migraine, and digestive distresses. The list goes on with insomnia, absence of menstruation, abnormal bleeding during menstruation, pregnancy concerns, and fertility problems. The physical effects of stress on women can be traced to everything from itchy skin to heart disease and cancer.

Those are the physical effects of distress: our detrimental, negative response to unusual demands placed upon us. Those are the effects of stress we hear about most frequently: the negative.

There are other effects of stress on women, however. There are the physical effects of stress that is positive: the effects of eustress.

In the remainder of this article, I want to concentrate on the effects of stress.

Physical Effects of Stress on Women When It Is Eustress

Eustress is positive, beneficial stress. This is the stress you feel when your hard work finally results in a promotion. It is the stress you create when you respond with laughter and intense euphoria to a marriage proposal.

The physical effects of stress on women when that stress is eustress are beneficial, health-giving effects. To understand that line of thinking, we need to look at the meaning of the Greek roots of the word.

The word “eustress” and the word “euphoria” have their first two letters in common. The Greek prefix “eu” indicates a state of happiness. This prefix is one of the basic Greek elements that we need to know to understand much of what we read.

The Greek prefix “eu” refers to that which is good, well, and normal. Words that carry this prefix normally refer to things that are happy and pleasing. For example, “euphoria” is defined by Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary as “a feeling of well-being or elation” and is said to come from the Greek prefix “Eu” and the word “pherein” meaning to bear. Euphoria is a good feeling experienced when you bear things happily.

Dividing the word “eustress” into its two syllables, “eu” and “stress,” we find that eustress is good, well, normal (eu) stress. Eustress makes you feel good. It makes you euphoric, joyful, merry, and exhilarated. It creates laughter.

A proverb from the Holy Bible has recently been proven scientifically true. That proverb refers directly to the physical effects of stress on women when that stress is eustress.

”A merry heart doeth good like a medicine, but a broken spirit drieth the bones.” The Holy Bible, Proverbs 17:22.

That proverb contrasts eustress and distress. It points out that, on the one hand, eustress, shown by a merry heart, is physically beneficial. Distress, on the other hand, is detrimental to physical health – it dries the bones.

The physical effects of stress on women, when that stress is eustress, are improved health and vitality. It prepares our physical bodies for the manual work they must do. It prepares our minds for decisions and cerebral work.

Two men by the names of Frank Churchill and Larry Morey wrote a little song that featured in Walt Disney’s “Snow White” film. Morey’s lyrics to “Whistle While You Work” extolled the benefits of eustress. They urged that “when there’s too much to do (a stressor)”, you shouldn’t let it bother you. Rather, wrote Morey, it is smart to whistle while you work. It makes time fly.

Physical effects of stress on women, when that stress is eustress, are beneficial. Women have increased strength and vitality with eustress. Their immune systems are better able to fight off disease. They tend to enjoy better health in every way. They have better physical balance.

While eustress is not a guarantee of safety from disease, its physiological effects do promote better health.

The Choice Is Yours

Many women believe that they have no choice in the matter, but we do. When meeting unusual demands, we can choose to respond negatively (distress) or positively (eustress). We can choose a “merry heart” or a “broken spirit.”

In other words, the physical effects of stress on women are determined greatly by women’s responses to the demands life makes on them.

© 2007, Anna Hart. Anna Hart, a career educator and writer, invites you to read more of her articles about the effects of stress at http://www.stressmanagementblog.com. Also on that site, Anna addresses the question of how to manage stress. If you are eager to learn some simple stress management techniques, you won’t want to miss Anna’s insights.

Article from articlesbase.com

Related Pregnancy Concerns Articles

Comments (0)

What is diabetes?

Diabetes is a condition where sufficient amounts of insulin are either not produced or the body is unable to use the insulin that is produced. Insulin is the hormone that allows glucose to enter the cells of the body to provide fuel. When glucose cannot enter the cells, it builds up in the blood and the body’s cells literally starve to death.

What are the different types of diabetes?

There are three basic types of diabetes including:

type 1 diabetes – also called insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM), type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune disorder in which the body’s immune system destroys, or attempts to destroy, the cells in the pancreas that produce insulin. Type 1 diabetes accounts for 5 to 10 percent of all diagnosed cases of diabetes in the US. Type 1 diabetes usually develops in children or young adults, but can start at any age.
type 2 diabetes – a metabolic disorder resulting from the body’s inability to make enough, or to properly use, insulin. It used to be called non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) and usually develops after age 45.
gestational diabetes – a condition in which the blood glucose level is elevated and other diabetic symptoms appear during pregnancy in a woman who has not previously been diagnosed with diabetes.

Diabetes is a serious disease, which, if not controlled, can be life threatening. It is often associated with long-term complications that can affect every system and part of the body. Diabetes can, among other things, contribute to eye disorders and blindness, heart disease, stroke, kidney failure, amputation, and nerve damage.

What happens with diabetes and pregnancy?

During pregnancy, the placenta supplies a growing fetus with nutrients and water, as well as produces a variety of hormones to maintain the pregnancy. In early pregnancy, hormones can cause increased insulin secretion and decreased glucose produced by the liver, which can lead to hypoglycemia (low blood glucose levels). In later pregnancy, some of these hormones (estrogen, cortisol, and human placental lactogen) can have a blocking effect on insulin, a condition called insulin resistance.

As the placenta grows, more of these hormones are produced, and insulin resistance becomes greater. Normally, the pancreas is able to make additional insulin to overcome insulin resistance, but when the production of insulin is not enough to overcome the effect of the placental hormones, gestational diabetes results or there may be worsening of pre-existing diabetes.

Why is diabetes a concern in pregnancy?

Diabetes in pregnancy can have serious consequences for the mother and the growing fetus. The severity of problems often depends on the degree of the mother’s diabetic disease, especially if she has vascular (blood vessel) complications and poor blood glucose control. Diabetes that occurs in pregnancy is often listed according to White’s classification:

Gestational diabetes – when a mother who does not have diabetes develops a resistance to insulin because of the hormones of pregnancy. Non-insulin dependent – Class A1
Insulin dependent – Class A2

Pre-existing diabetes – women who already have insulin-dependent diabetes and become pregnant. Class B – diabetes developed after age 20, have had the disease less than 10 years, no vascular complications.
Class C – diabetes developed between age 10 and 19 or have had the disease for 10-19 years, no vascular complications.
Class D – diabetes developed before age 10, have had the disease more than 20 years, vascular complications are present.
Class F – diabetic women with kidney disease called nephropathy.
Class R – diabetic women with retinopathy (retinal damage).
Class T – diabetic women who have undergone kidney transplant.
Class H – diabetic women with coronary artery or other heart disease.

It is very important for a mother to maintain very close control of her diabetes during pregnancy. Generally, the poorer the control of blood glucose and the more severe the disease and complications, the greater the risks for the pregnancy.

Maternal complications of diabetes on a pregnancy:

Complications for the mother depend on the degree of insulin need, the severity of complications associated with diabetes, and control of blood glucose.

Most complications occur in women with pre-existing diabetes and are more likely when there is poor control of blood glucose. Women may require more frequent insulin injections. They may have very low blood glucose levels, which can be life threatening if untreated, or they may have ketoacidosis, a condition that results from high levels of blood glucose. Ketoacidosis may also be life threatening if untreated. It is not clear whether pregnancy worsens diabetic related blood vessel damage and retinal changes, or if it causes changes in kidney function.

Complications for fetus and baby:

Infants of mothers with diabetes are at greater risk for several problems, especially if blood glucose levels are not carefully controlled, including the following:

birth defects
Birth defects are more likely in infants of diabetic mothers, especially insulin-dependent women who may have two to six times greater the risk of major birth defects. Some birth defects are serious enough to cause fetal death. Birth defects usually originate sometime during the first trimester of pregnancy. They are more likely in women with pre-existing diabetes, who may have changes in blood glucose during that time. Overall, major birth defects may occur in about 5 to 10 percent of infants born to insulin-dependent women. Major birth defects that may occur in infants of diabetic mothers include the following: heart and connecting blood vessels
brain and spine abnormalities
urinary and kidney
digestive tract

stillbirth (fetal death)
Stillbirth is more likely in pregnant women with diabetes. The fetus may grow slowly in the uterus due to poor circulation or other conditions, such as high blood pressure, that can complicate diabetic pregnancy. The exact reason stillbirths occur with diabetes is unknown. The risk of stillbirth increases in women with poor blood glucose control and with blood vessel changes.
macrosomia
Macrosomia refers to a baby that is considerably larger than normal. All of the nutrients the fetus receives come directly from the mother’s blood. If the maternal blood has too much glucose, the pancreas of the fetus senses the high glucose levels and produces more insulin in an attempt to use this glucose. The fetus converts the extra glucose to fat. Even when the mother has gestational diabetes, the fetus is able to produce all the insulin it needs. The combination of high blood glucose levels from the mother and high insulin levels in the fetus results in large deposits of fat that causes the fetus to grow excessively large.
birth injury
Birth injury may occur due to the baby’s large size and difficulty being born.
hypoglycemia
Hypoglycemiais low levels of blood sugar in the baby immediately after delivery. This problem occurs if the mother’s blood sugar levels have been consistently high causing the fetus to have a high level of insulin in its circulation. After delivery, the baby continues to have a high insulin level, but no longer has the high level of sugar from the mother, resulting in the newborn’s blood sugar level becoming very low. The baby’s blood sugar level is checked after birth, and if the level is too low, it may be necessary to give the baby glucose intravenously.
respiratory distress (difficulty breathing)
Too much insulin or too much glucose in a baby’s system may delay lung maturation and cause respiratory difficulties in babies. This is more likely if they are born before 37 weeks of pregnancy.
How is diabetes diagnosed?

Women with diabetes before pregnancy have already been diagnosed. Depending on the severity of their disease, they may need continued care by their medical physician along with their obstetrician.

Nearly all non-diabetic pregnant women are screened for diabetes between 24 and 28 weeks of pregnancy. In addition to a complete medical history and physical examination, a glucose screening test is given, which involves drinking a glucose drink followed by measurement of glucose levels after a one-hour interval.

If this test shows an increased blood sugar level, a three-hour glucose tolerance test will be performed after a few days of following a special diet.

If results of the second test are in the abnormal range, diabetes is diagnosed.

Treatment for diabetes:

Specific treatment for diabetes will be determined by your physician based on:

your age, overall health, and medical history
extent of the disease
your tolerance for specific medications, procedures, or therapies
expectations for the course of the disease
your opinion or preference

Treatment for diabetes focuses on keeping blood glucose levels in the normal range. Treatment may include:

special diet with controlled amounts of carbohydrate
exercise
blood glucose monitoring
insulin injections
Managing diabetes during the pregnancy:

Special fetal testing and monitoring may be needed for pregnant diabetics, especially those who are taking insulin (because of the increased risks for stillbirth). These tests can include the following:

fetal movement counting – counting the number of movements or kicks in a certain period of time, and watching for a change in activity.
ultrasound – a diagnostic imaging technique which uses high-frequency sound waves and a computer to create images of blood vessels, tissues, and organs. Ultrasounds are used to view internal organs as they function, and to assess blood flow through various vessels.
nonstress testing – a measurement of the fetal heart rate in response to the fetus’ movements.
biophysical profile – a test that uses the nonstress test and ultrasound to examine fetal movements, heart rate, and amniotic fluid amounts.
Doppler flow studies – a type of ultrasound which uses sound waves to measure blood flow.

Infants of diabetic mothers may be delivered vaginally or by cesarean, depending on the estimated fetal weight and the mother’s health. Because infants of diabetic mothers tend to be large compared to fetuses of the same gestational period, they may need to be delivered a few weeks early. This can often help prevent difficulties in labor and birth that can happen when a baby is very large. An amniocentesis may be performed in the last few weeks of pregnancy to check the amniotic fluid for fetal lung maturity. If the lungs are mature, some mothers may have labor induced or a cesarean delivery.

Discover How You Can Treat Infertility Naturally, Without Drugs or Surgery

Read about How To Reverse Infertility Naturally, and get Amazing Free Bonuses On Health, Relaxation and Baby Names and a 24 Hours Support From Our Customer Care on Pregnancy and Fertility Issues.

Article from articlesbase.com

Related Concerns During Pregnancy Articles

Comments (0)

http://tube-on.com/stop – Quit Smoking Easy – Facts of quitting

smoking smoke cigarette cigarettes quit nicotine stop cheap ban effects tobacco no cessation of quitting second hand pot buy camel free hypnosis anti public health about cigar how non cancer help bad to patch facts laws gum secondhand lung statistics videos withdrawal benefits lungs discount patches tips i addiction causes teens while pregnant after sign laser now affects dangers prevention herbal quiting diseases during pregnancy risks support weed ways side aids stopping teenage effect and when you best way smokers replacement passive quite pill cold turkey programs why zyban dunhill body marijuana program hazards what happens on inhaler caused by harmful therapy reasons cigars nhs

Comments (0)

smoking smoke cigarette cigarettes quit nicotine stop cheap ban effects tobacco no cessation of quitting second hand pot buy camel free hypnosis anti public health about cigar how non cancer help bad to patch facts laws gum secondhand lung statistics videos withdrawal benefits lungs discount patches tips i addiction causes teens while pregnant after sign laser now affects dangers prevention herbal quiting diseases during pregnancy risks support weed ways side aids stopping teenage effect and when you best way smokers replacement passive quite pill cold turkey programs why zyban dunhill body marijuana program hazards what happens on inhaler caused by harmful therapy reasons cigars nhs

Comments (0)

Learn more at http://www.SaberHacer.com – Experts say kids as young as 8 need factual information about sex. Here are tips on what to talk about when, and how to share values so you can help your child make good decisions.

Comments (0)