The Pill: What You Might Not Know

http://abcnews.go.com/print?id=6484342



Even With More Women on Birth Control, Many Don't 
Hear About the Variety of Side Effects





By LAUREN COX
ABC News Medical Unit

Dec. 18, 2008­

A new pilot program in London will make the birth 
control pill available next month, through 
pharmacists, without a prescription. It's a big 
shift from December 1955, when scientists made 
the first presentation that progesterone can stop 
women from ovulating, and many states had 
<http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/pill//timeline/index.html>laws 
banning the use of contraception.

Despite nearly 50 years of access to the pill, 
some women are clueless about side effects that 
doctors might not bother sharing, and some that are just being discovered.

"Doctors in general tend to hesitate to suggest 
things to the patient," said Dr. Nanette Santoro, 
director of reproductive endocrinology at the 
Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York 
City and a member of The Endocrine Society.

"These are things that wouldn't have a major health impact."

Santoro said, with limited time in appointments, 
doctors focus on the major side effects that can 
pose a health risk: the risk of blood clots among 
smokers, high blood pressure, and stroke with 
some migraine headaches, for example.

But Santoro knows of many less-pressing and 
idiosyncratic side effects from the pill that 
don't always make it into the doctor's talk.

Women on the pill may suffer a lackluster sex 
drive, mood swings, or even extra sinus pressure, she said.

"Some women may notice their sinuses are a little 
stuffier," Santoro explained. "It speaks to the 
bigger point that pills do affect the mucus production of the body."

That means mucus, whether on the cervix or in the nose, can become thicker.

This August, research began to confirm another 
strange connection between the birth control pill and a woman's nose.

In a study of about 100 college students in the 
U.K., scientists found that the pill may change 
how women find a man's scent sexually attractive.

The study collected body odor from volunteers and 
put it in jars for the ladies to smell. Among the 
200-300 different chemical compounds in sweat, 
researchers tried to draw a connection to the 
woman's reaction to the sweat and a by-product in 
the sweat from the major histocompatibility 
complex (MHC) genes, which contribute to the body's immune system.

Since the late 1990s, research has shown that 
women find the scent of a man more attractive if 
he has MHC genes that are different from their 
own, and less attractive if he has similar MHC genes.

But that all may change two months after a woman goes on the pill.




The Pill May Change How You Choose a Man

"In the pill-using group, there was a significant 
shift in their preference for men who had more 
similar odors," said Craig Roberts, a co-author 
of the August MHC study appearing in the 
"Proceedings of the Royal Society B," and a 
lecturer at the University of Liverpool in the U.K.

Roberts said the women in the control group who 
didn't take the pill only started to find men 
with different MHC genes more attractive in the 
second round of body odor sniff tests.

"It's an odd thing to do, smell odors in jars," 
Roberts said. "We don't know the effects in the 
real world, but it does carry implications for 
women who are using the pill, and you can 
extrapolate from this very artificial laboratory study quite a long way."

For example, "They may choose someone they may 
not choose otherwise," he said. In theory, 
Roberts said a woman may choose a man while she's 
on the pill and feel fine, but subconsciously 
find her mate less attractive if she goes off the pill.

"There is evidence that couples that are more MCH 
similar to each other have more difficulty 
conceiving, and they have more miscarriages," 
added Roberts, who has also cited research that 
women who marry men with similar MCH genes are more likely to have an affair.

Aside from chemical conjectures, Einstein's 
Santoro has heard straight from her patients that 
the pill can affect one's sex life.

"Clearly, pills suppress androgen production in 
the ovary, so, to the extent that androgen levels 
drive sex drive in women, it could affect them," 
said Santoro, who is also a doctor with the 
Montefiore Medical Center in New York City.

"It's also possible for some women, especially if 
they're Catholics, to have a libido problem. ... 
Once they start on the pill, it may reduce their 
enjoyment in some way out of guilt," she said.

Santoro said many of her patients tend to think 
of the pill as an off-switch for hormones, but in 
truth, the pill exposes women to higher levels of 
hormones to overcome their own cycle.




Other Strange Side Effects From the Pill

"Because the pill in a lot of ways produces a 
pseudo-pregnant state, some of the side effects 
of pregnancy are noticed in the pill," Santoro said.

That means women on the pill may experience 
heartburn, or constipation, or sleep 
disturbances, either as insomnia or extra sleepiness.

Santoro said doctors are also less likely to get 
into great detail about weight changes.

"We tell our patients that weight doesn't change 
if you take the pill ... but among the individual 
women, there may be some who gain and some who 
lose," said Santoro, who added that large studies 
on the subject might cancel out the average 
weight changes experienced by women on the pill.

Overall, Santoro said she'd spend more time 
talking about the pill's more serious health 
risks and side effects with a patient.

"Women over 35 who smoke more than 10 cigarettes 
a day -- they shouldn't be taking the pill at all," she said.

For patients who have migraines with aura, which 
refers to feelings and symptoms noticed shortly 
before the headache begins, "they should not take 
pills without making sure everybody's on board."

Santoro said although research hasn't drawn any 
hard-and-fast conclusions about side effects from 
taking the pill for an extended period of time, 
many of her patients have decided to give the hormones a break.

"It's outdated, but some women feel better if 
they take a little 'pill holiday' now and then," she said.

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We ask this through Christ our Lord.
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<*}}}>< 
<http://www.halfthekingdom.org/please%20donate.html>Donations 
are needed and very much appreciated <*}}}><
<*}}}>< <http://www.holypostage.com/>Holy Postage <*}}}><
<*}}}><<http://www.halfthekingdom.org/>Half the 
<http://www.halfthekingdom.org/>Kingdom!<*}}}><

Lord, may everything we do begin with Your 
inspiration and continue with Your help,
so that all our prayers and works may begin in You and by You be happily ended.
We ask this through Christ our Lord.
Amen.


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