Menstruation and Pediatric Spinal Cord Injury |
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Authors: | Caroline Anderson M.S. Mulcahey Lawrence C. Vogel |
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Affiliation: | Shriners Hospitals, Chicago Unit, Chicago, IL 2Shriners Hospitals, Philadelphia Unit, Philadelphia. PA |
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Abstract: | AbstractMenstrual characteristics were studied in young women who sustained spinal cord injuries (SCI) prior to puberty or in early adolescence. Subjects were 37 females who were injured prior to age 16 years and who were at least 10 years old at the time of interview; 22 were injured prior to menarche and 15 after menarche. Average age of menarche for females injured before puberty was 12.3 years which is similar to their mothers (mean 12.6 years) and to patients injured after menarche (mean 12.0 years). Of 15 females injured after menarche, seven reported no interruption in menses while eight had interruptions ranging from one to seven months. No significant menstrual problems were noted in either group. This information about menstruation should be included in sexuality teaching of parents and patients when an SCI occurs to a child or adolescent. (J Spinal Cord Med 1997; 20:56-59) |
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Keywords: | menstruation pinal cord injury pediatrics sexuality |
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