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[4] Menotropin preparations are designed for use in selected women where they stimulate the ovaries to mature follicles, thus making them more fertile. They are administered by typically daily injection, intramuscularly or subcutaneously, for about ten days under close supervision to adjust dose and duration of therapy.
Menopur, 5 mL vials containing 75 IU FSH and 75 IU LH. Repronex, vials containing either 75 IU FSH and 75 IU LH, or 150 IU FSH and 150 IU LH. Common side effects of preparations containing FSH and LH are: [4] Mild bloating; Pain, swelling, or irritation injection site; Rash at injection site or other part of body; Stomach pain or pelvic pain
Urofollitropin is a purified form of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) that is manufactured by extraction from human urine and then purified [1] to remove various proteins and other substances.
100–200 pg/mL <55 ng/dL [4] Callen-Lorde: United States "Some guidelines recommend checking estradiol and testosterone levels at baseline and throughout the monitoring of estrogen therapy. We have not found a clinical use for routine hormone levels that justifies the expense.
[4] [5] As such, it is an estrogen, or an agonist of the estrogen receptors. [4] [5] Estradiol benzoate has very low affinity for the ERs, on the order of 100-fold less than that of estradiol. [64] As such, estradiol benzoate is regarded as essentially inactive in terms of estrogenic effect itself, acting solely as a prodrug to estradiol. [5]
The alpha subunit is common to each protein dimer (well conserved within species, but differing between them), [4] and a unique beta subunit confers biological specificity. [7] The alpha chains are highly conserved proteins of about 100 amino acid residues which contain ten conserved cysteines all involved in disulfide bonds, [ 8 ] as shown in ...
In comparison with the smaller dose, finasteride 5mg had a few additional prominent side effects, and a slightly higher severity of the side effects seen in the 1mg dose.
The procedure is to take the child's weight in pounds, divide by 150 lb, and multiply the fractional result by the adult dose to find the equivalent child dosage.For example, if an adult dose of medication calls for 30 mg and the child weighs 30 lb, divide the weight by 150 (30/150) to obtain 1/5 and multiply 1/5 times 30 mg to get 6 mg.