释义 |
morning-after pill
morn·ing-af·ter pill (môr′nĭng-ăf′tər)n. Any of various oral drugs that are intended to prevent pregnancy for up to five days after sexual intercourse by delaying or inhibiting ovulation, preventing fertilization of an egg, or preventing implantation of a fertilized egg.morning-after pill n (Pharmacology) an oral contraceptive that is effective if taken some hours after intercourse morn′ing-af′ter pill` n. a contraceptive pill containing only an estrogen and used by women after sexual intercourse. ThesaurusNoun | 1. | morning-after pill - a large dose of estrogen taken orally within 24 to 72 hours after intercourse; prevents implantation of a fertilized ovum and so acts as a contraceptive; commonly used after rape or incestbirth control device, contraceptive, contraceptive device, prophylactic device, preventative, preventive - an agent or device intended to prevent conception | Translationsmorning (ˈmoːniŋ) noun the first part of the day, approximately up to noon. this morning; tomorrow morning. 早晨 早晨morning-ˈafter pill noun a contraceptive pill that a woman can take soon after having sex. 口服避孕丸 女用口服避孕丸morning glory any of various vines with funnel-shaped purple, blue, pink or white flowers that bloom early in the day. 牽牛花 牵牛花ˈmorning dress noun the clothes worn by a man for very formal events (eg weddings) held during the day. 常禮服 常礼服EncyclopediaSeepillmorning-after pill
pill [pil] tablet.morning-after pill popular name for an emergency postcoital contraceptive containing a high dose of the hormones usually found in an contraceptive" >oral contraceptive, either an estrogen plus a progestational agent, or the latter alone; used to prevent pregnancy after unprotected intercourse occurs, or after a contraceptive method fails during intercourse, administered orally.morning-after pill (MAP), an oral drug that, when taken by a woman within 2-3 days after intercourse, reduces the probability that she will become pregnant. Synonym(s): emergency hormonal contraception, postcoital contraceptionThe U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved two regimens for postcoital contraception. The Yuzpe regimen consists of a combination of progestogen (levonorgestrol 0.25 mg or norgestrel 0.5 mg) and estrogen (ethinyl estradiol 100 mcg) taken at once and repeated in 12 hours. Alternatively, two doses of levonorgestrel 0.75 mg may be taken without estrogen. With either regimen, the first dose should preferably be taken within 24 hours after intercourse, and not more than 72 hours after. The Yuzpe method reduces the likelihood of pregnancy by about 57%, the levonorgestrel method by 85%. About 50% of women experience uterine bleeding within 1 week and most of the rest within 3 weeks unless conception has occurred. If taken early enough, the hormones may prevent fertilization by altering tubal function or exerting toxicity against the ovum. Probably, however, they usually act by preventing implantation of a fertilized ovum. This is not emergency contraception but rather chemical abortion. The incidence of nausea is about 40% with levonorgestrel alone and about 65% with the Yuzpe regimen. Headache, fluid retention, and breast tenderness may also occur. This procedure is contraindicated in women for whom oral contraceptives are contraindicated, such as those with hypertension or a history of stroke or thromboembolic disease. The short course of high-dose hormones probably does not interrupt a pregnancy after implantation has occurred, and there is no evidence that fetal harm has occurred when such a pregnancy has continued to term. However, hormone use is contraindicated in known pregnancy or if the woman has had unprotected intercourse within the preceding 3-10 days. An application for over-the-counter marketing of levonorgestrel has been denied by the FDA. morning-after pill (môr′nĭng-ăf′tər)n. Any of various oral drugs that are intended to prevent pregnancy for up to five days after sexual intercourse by delaying or inhibiting ovulation, preventing fertilization of an egg, or preventing implantation of a fertilized egg.emergency contraception A popular term for secondary “contraception” used in the event of failure or suboptimal “primary contraception”.morning-after pill Emergency contraception, interception pill Gynecology A high-dose estrogen given in the early post-ovulatory period to prevent implantation of a potentially fertilized egg after unprotected intercourse. See Contraception, DES, Norplant, Pearl index, RU 486. morning-after pill See EMERGENCY CONTRACEPTION.morning-after pill Related to morning-after pill: Emergency Birth Control, Emergency contraceptive pillWords related to morning-after pillnoun a large dose of estrogen taken orally within 24 to 72 hours after intercourseRelated Words- birth control device
- contraceptive
- contraceptive device
- prophylactic device
- preventative
- preventive
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