Most women would allow medical students to participate in their care, a finding moderated by a number of factors. A small proportion of women were biased against participation of male medical students. Physicians overestimated patients' ratings and might themselves be a source of bias regarding medical students' involvement.
For most women, physician gender was one of the least important characteristics, regardless of specialty. Excellent skills might give all physicians an edge in patients' choice decisions, a finding contrary to widely held beliefs about more limited future opportunities for men in some specialties.
Although the precise role of relaxin has yet to be elucidated, it has been implicated in the regulation of physiological and biochemical processes in the reproductive tract during pregnancy and parturition. In this study, the growth-promoting effects of relaxin and related compositional changes in the uterus, cervix, and vagina of immature ovariectomized estrogen-primed rats were examined. Relaxin increased the wet weight of the uterus, cervix, and vagina in a significant and linear manner over the log of the dose range (1-30 micrograms; 6 h). The increase in uterine weight was due to increases in both dry weight and water content at all doses. A dose of 1 microgram relaxin induced maximal increases in dry weights in the cervix and vagina over control values; higher doses increased wet weight, but these changes were due solely to increases in water content. Thirty micrograms of relaxin were found to increase total soluble protein and glycogen content of the vagina above control values after 6 h. Relaxin did not alter the total collagen levels of the uterus or cervix, and collagen concentrations were significantly reduced in these organs 6 and 24 h after treatment. Total glycosaminoglycan levels were elevated by relaxin in the uterus (6 h) and cervix (24 h). Total vaginal collagen was increased 24 h after relaxin injection, but the collagen concentration was decreased over the time interval studied, and glycosaminoglycan levels in the vagina were unaltered. In summary, relaxin stimulates growth of the uterus, cervix, and vagina by increasing water content and tissue mass. The increases in distensibility that relaxin induces in these organs appear to be related to changes in the fluid matrix and proteoglycan metabolism rather than alterations in collagen concentration, at least 6-24 h after a single injection. These results support the hypothesis that relaxin plays a significant role in the maintenance of pregnancy through its contribution to fetal accommodation and in the facilitation of parturition through expansion of the entire birth canal.
The hormone relaxin has been implicated in the regulation of several processes in the reproductive tract during pregnancy and parturition. This study investigated the uterine effects of relaxin in immature and mature ovariectomized, estrogen-primed rats using morphometric and histochemical analysis. Rats were sprayed at 30 or 70 days of age and given estrogen (5 micrograms) 7 days later. After a week, they received an injection of porcine relaxin (100 micrograms) and were killed 6 h later; controls received vehicle alone. Histological sections were obtained from 7 levels of each uterine horn, and the volumes of endometrium and myometrium were calculated by use of a Zeiss Videoplan Computer Image Analyzer. In immature animals, relaxin treatment doubled uterine weights during the treatment period, and cross sections from relaxin-treated animals exhibited significant increases in the areas of both the myometrium and endometrium, 150% and 130% respectively. Mature animals were less responsive to relaxin although they also exhibited significant increases in uterine weight (31%), myometrial volume (29%), and endometrial volume (22%). With the use of Masson's Trichrome stain for collagen, we observed that relaxin alters the connective tissue framework of both endometrium and myometrium; control uterine collagen appears highly organized and dense with compact collagen fibers, whereas the collagen of relaxin-treated uteri is loosely arranged and disorganized with widely separated collagen fibers. Relaxin-stimulated uteri exhibited significantly greater vascularization, as evidenced by the size of arteries and veins in the vascular region between the circular and longitudinal muscle layers. Increased vascularization and uterine blood flow may be one mechanism involved in relaxin's uterotropic effect and is being investigated further.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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