Depo Provera
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| Depo Provera
| |
| Background | |
| B.C. type | Hormonal |
| First use | ? |
| Failure rates (per year) | |
| Perfect use | 0.3% |
| Typical use | 0.3% |
| Usage | |
| Duration effect | 90 days (12weeks + 5 days) |
| Reversibility | 0-6months |
| User reminders | Maximum interval is just under 3months |
| Clinic review | 12 weeks |
| Advantages | |
| Periods | Usually no periods from 2nd injection |
| Benefits | Especially if poor pill compliance |
| Disadvantages | |
| STD protection | No |
| Periods | Especially in 1st injection may be frequent spotting |
| Risks | Reduced bone density |
| Medical notes | |
| For those intending to start family, suggest switch 6 months prior to alternative method (eg POP) allowing more reliable return fertility. | |
Depo-Provera Contraceptive Injection (medroxyprogesterone acetate) is the U.S. brand name of a birth control product manufactured by Pfizer Inc. It is a hormonal birth control method containing a synthetic progestin, without estrogen, and is administered to women in the form of an intramuscular injection once every 11 to 13 weeks. Depo-Provera causes the ovaries to stop releasing eggs, and is 99.7% effective at preventing pregnancy.
Contents |
Benefits[edit]
- Unlike oral contraceptive pills which have to be taken at roughly the same time each day (Combined Oral Contraceptive Pill within 12 hours and Progesterone only pill within 3 hours), the effectiveness of Depo Provera is not dependent upon the ability to remember to take daily doses. The only continuing action is to book subsequent follow-up injections every twelve weeks.
- Likewise, Depo Provera is not affected by absorption issues (diarrhea, vomiting, bowel disorders) nor by antibiotic effects on the normal gut bacterial flora.
- It provides hormonal birth control without the risks associated with estrogen and may in fact reduce the risk of ovarian and endometrial cancers.
- Depo Provera, like progestin-only pills, may be used by breast-feeding mothers; this is not the case for combined oral contraceptive pill. Heavy bleeding is possible if given in the immediate postpartum time and is best delayed until six weeks after birth. It may be used within five days if not breast feeding.
Disadvantages & side effects [edit]
- Recent research has shown that Depo-Provera significantly decreases bone density in women, as compared with others in the same age group (see below).
- For some women, Depo-Provera may have a number of potentially intolerable side effects, including loss of interest in sexual activity, infertility, severe headaches, constant bleeding (metrorrhagia), weight gain, panic attacks, muscle pain, heart palpitations, pain during sex, and acne. Side effects of Depo-Provera may persist up to 24 months after the last injection.
- Those planning a pregnancy after having used Depo-Provera may wish to switch to alternative contraceptive methods some 6-9 months prior. Whilst it only gives consistent contraception for 12 weeks, and pregnancy is possible after 13 weeks if not repeated in time, fertility may be temporarily reduced in some women for up to 24 months with average fertility returning in approximately 9 months.
- Depo-Provera is also used with male sex offenders as a form of chemical castration as it has the effect of drastically reducing sex drive in males.
- A study of 819 women in one city found an association between using Depo-Provera and higher incidence of chlamydia and gonorrhea.[1]
- One side effect (which some consider a benefit) is that many women stop having a regular menstrual cycle while on the drug.
- One reason for people not choosing this method of contraception is hypodermic needle phobia.
Black box warning [edit]
While it has long been known that Depo-Provera causes bone loss, it has recently been discovered that the osteoporotic effects of the injection grow worse the longer Depo-Provera is administered and may last long after the injections are stopped. For this reason, on November 17, 2004 the United States Food and Drug Administration and Pfizer agreed to put a "black box warning" on Depo-Provera's label.[2] However the most recent evidence reviewed by WHO (World Health Organization) has weighed the benefits and risks assoiated with DMPA use and have given it a green signal for long term use.[3][4] Cohort studies have shown that BMD loss is reversible within 30 months of discontinuation of DMPA and that in adolescents the recovery is much quicker.[5][6]
Dangers of Using Depo Provera in Developing Countries[edit]
http://www.multinationalmonitor.org/hyper/issues/1985/02/marketing-abroad.html
Other uses [edit]
Depo Provera is also used to treat menstrual migraines by causing the estrogen-progesterone cycle to stop.
Footnotes[edit]
- ↑ Morrison CS, Bright P, Wong EL, Kwok C, Yacobson I, Gaydos CA, Tucker HT, Blumenthal PD (2004). "Hormonal contraceptive use, cervical ectopy, and the acquisition of cervical infections". Sex Transm Dis 31 (9): 561-7. PMID 15480119.
- ↑ FDA (November 17 2004). Black Box Warning Added Concerning Long-Term Use of Depo-Provera Contraceptive Injection. Retrieved on 2006-05-12.
- ↑ World Health Organization (September 2005). Hormonal contraception and bone health. Family Planning. Retrieved on 2006-05-12.
- ↑ Curtis KM, Martins SL (2006). "Progestogen-only contraception and bone mineral density: a systematic review". Contraception 73 (5): 470-87. PMID 16627031.
- ↑ Scholes D, LaCroix AZ, Ichikawa LE, Barlow WE, Ott SM (2002). "Injectable hormone contraception and bone density: results from a prospective study". Epidemiology 13 (5): 581-7. PMID 12192229.
- ↑ Scholes D, LaCroix AZ, Ichikawa LE, Barlow WE, Ott SM (2005). "Change in bone mineral density among adolescent women using and discontinuing depot medroxyprogesterone acetate contraception". Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 159 (2): 139-44. PMID 15699307.
External links[edit]
- Pfizer official site
- Research on Injectable contraceptives - Family Health International's fact sheet on injectables, including Depo Provera.
| Birth control edit | ||
|---|---|---|
| Sterilization: | Tubal ligation, Vasectomy, Essure | |
| Post-intercourse: | Emergency contraception • Abortion: Surgical, Medical, Herbal/Drug | |
| Intra-uterine: | IUD, IUS (progesterone) | |
| Anti-estrogen: | Ormeloxifene (a.k.a. Centchroman) | |
| Hormonal: | Combined: COCP ('the Pill'), Patch, Nuvaring
Progestogen only: POP mini-pill, Depo Provera, Norplant, Implanon | |
| Barrier: | Condom, Diaphragm, Shield, Cap, Sponge, Spermicide | |
| Behavioral: | Coitus interruptus, Fertility awareness, Rhythm Method, Lactational
Avoiding vaginal intercourse: Anal sex, Oral sex, Outercourse, Masturbation, Abstinence | |

