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Dive into the research topics where Cynthia Klaisle is active.

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Featured researches published by Cynthia Klaisle.


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1989

Clinical evaluation of the Capronor contraceptive implant: Preliminary report

Philip D. Darney; Scott E. Monroe; Cynthia Klaisle; Ana Alvarado

Capronor, a single-capsule, biodegradable, subdermal contraceptive that releases levonorgestrel over a 12- to 18-month period, has been evaluated in 48 healthy women, ages 18 to 40 years. Sixteen participants received a 2.5 cm capsule (12 mg of levonorgestrel), and 32 received a 4.0 cm capsule (21.6 mg of levonorgestrel). Serum levonorgestrel levels were significantly lower in the 2.5 cm group. Ovulation occurred in all cycles in the 2.5 cm group and in 26.3% of cycles in the 4.0 cm group. Levonorgestrel levels with the shorter capsule were too low for reliable contraception in all users, and 4 cm may be a minimal functional length. Bleeding patterns were regular in most women who ovulated and irregular in most remaining subjects. It is assumed that changes in cervical mucus and the endometrium contributed to effective contraception despite the frequency of ovulation.


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1992

Rates and outcomes of planned pregnancy after use of norplant capsules, norplant II rods, or levonorgestrel-releasing or copper TCu 380Ag intrauterine contraceptive devices

Irving Sivin; Janet Stern; Soledad Diaz; Margarita Pavez; Francisco Alvarez; Vivian Brache; Daniel R. Mishell; Maria Lacarra; Terence McCarthy; Pentti Holma; Philip D. Darney; Cynthia Klaisle; Sven-Eric Olsson; Viveca Odlind

OBJECTIVES The objectives were to measure rates of planned pregnancy and factors affecting these rates after use of very-long-acting contraceptive methods (Norplant or Norplant II implants, a levonorgestrel-releasing intrauterine contraceptive device, or the copper T (model TCu 380Ag) intrauterine contraceptive device. STUDY DESIGN The design was a concurrent, multicenter prospective study of 372 women who stopped contraception for planned pregnancy. Analysis was by life-table, log-rank, and standard chi 2 methods. RESULTS Pregnancy rates 12 and 24 months after cessation of contraceptive use were 82 and 89 per 100, respectively. Age at removal and family planning intentions at initiation of contraception were both significantly correlated with pregnancy rates (p less than 0.05), but former contraceptive regimen and duration of contraceptive use were not. Pregnancy outcomes did not deviate from normal limits and did not differ by contraceptive formerly used. CONCLUSION Contraceptive implants releasing 30 micrograms/day of levonorgestrel or intrauterine contraceptive devices releasing 20 micrograms/day of levonorgestrel or having copper surface areas of 380 mm2 are associated with normal fertility after use for women seeking pregnancy at termination. Durations of use do not affect pregnancy rates.


Contraception | 2001

Levonorgestrel concentrations during 7 years of continuous use of Jadelle contraceptive implants.

Irving Sivin; Livia Wan; Sirpa Ranta; Francisco Alvarez; Vivian Brache; Daniel R. Mishell; Philip D. Darney; Arijit Biswas; Soledad Diaz; Orawan Kiriwat; Manee Piya Anant; Cynthia Klaisle; Margarita Pavez; Janet Schechter

Serum levonorgestrel concentrations were assayed in a multicenter, 7-year study of 199 users of Jadelle rod implants. We examined drug levels, patterns of changes, factors affecting drug levels, and concentrations at which pregnancies occurred. Mean levonorgestrel concentrations declined from 435 pg/mL at 1 month of use to 64% of that value (280 pg/mL) at the end of 3 years. Between the end of the third and fifth years neither mean nor median serum levels varied markedly. At 5 years the mean concentration was again 64% of the first months mean. Declining levels were observed thereafter through the end of 7 years when the mean, 224 pg/mL, was 52% of the 1-month value. Last measured drug concentrations of women who became pregnant during Jadelle use had mean and median values of 152 and 144 pg/mL, respectively, and a maximum value of 180 pg/mL. Analyses indicated ponderal index, body weight, duration of use, and a single clinical center were the most important variables affecting measured levonorgestrel levels. Approximately one-third of assays in the sixth and seventh years were found to be below 180 pg/mL, suggesting that Jadelle levonorgestrel implants would not maintain sufficiently high levels of effectiveness against pregnancy after 5 years and that heavier women would then be at greater risk of pregnancy.


Contraception | 1998

Contraception with two levonorgestrel rod implants : A 5-year study in the United States and Dominican Republic

Irving Sivin; Francisco Alvarez; Daniel R. Mishell; Philip D. Darney; Livia Wan; Vivian Brache; Maria Lacarra; Cynthia Klaisle; Janet Stern

A 5-year trial of a two-rod contraceptive implant, which releases the progestin levonorgestrel (LNG rod), was conducted at four clinics with 594 women. Mean age and weight at admission were 25.5 years and 62.4 kg, respectively. Consent to continue through 5 years was sought and obtained when the 3-year cumulative pregnancy rate proved to be 0.8 per 100. No pregnancies occurred in the fourth or fifth years. The 5-year cumulative pregnancy rate was, therefore, 0.8 per 100 with an annual average pregnancy rate below 2 per 1000 women. Prolonged bleeding/spotting (8.2% of subjects) and irregular bleeding (5.6%) were the most frequently cited medical reasons for removal. Removals for headache (4.7%) and weight change (4.0%) were the next most frequent medical reasons. Between 1% and 2% of subjects during the 5-year trial sought removals for each of the following conditions: mood changes, lower abdominal pain, depression, or pain at the implant site. The mean annual continuation rate during the study was 77 per 100. Use per woman averaged 2.96 years. Mean removal time was 5.9 +/- 0.6 min. These data indicate that, for a 5-year period, the two LNG rod implants are equivalent to the six Norplant capsule implants with respect to safety and efficacy parameters, but permit easier and more rapid implant removal.


Contraception | 1996

Serum concentrations of estradiol, progesterone, and levonorgestrel are not determinants of endometrial histology or abnormal bleeding in long-term Norplant® implant users

Philip D. Darney; Robert N. Taylor; Cynthia Klaisle; Kent Bottles; Charles Zaloudek

The objective of this study was to determine the relevance of serum estradiol, progesterone and levonorgestrel concentrations to endometrial histology and uterine bleeding associated with long-term Norplant implants use. Eighteen five-year users of Norplant implants had endometrial biopsies and determinations of serum estradiol, progesterone and levonorgestrel concentrations. Correlations among these factors and uterine bleeding were calculated. Proliferative endometrium (but not sex steroid levels) was associated with abnormal bleeding. Neither ovarian steroid nor levonorgestrel concentrations was a predictor of abnormal bleeding. Hyperplastic changes were not seen even with high estradiol and low levonorgestrel levels.


Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey | 1992

Evaluation of a One-Year Levonorgestrel-Releasing Contraceptive Implant: Side Effects, Release Rates, and Biodegradability

Philip D. Darney; Cynthia Klaisle; Scott E. Monroe; C. Edgar Cook; Nancy R. Phillips; Anton Schindler

OBJECTIVE To determine the release rates, effects on ovulation, and side effects of two lengths of a biodegradable, subdermal contraceptive implant containing levonorgestrel in a caprolactone capsule. DESIGN Phase II randomized clinical trial. SETTING Public family planning clinic at an urban general hospital. PARTICIPANTS Forty-eight healthy, parous, ovulating volunteers. INTERVENTION Subjects were randomly assigned either a 2.5- or a 4.0-cm contraceptive capsule that was worn under the skin of the upper arm for 1 year if not removed earlier for other reasons. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Serum concentrations of levonorgestrel, progesterone, estradiol, and lipoproteins were measured as were metabolic parameters. Vaginal bleeding and other side effects were recorded. After implant removal, remaining levonorgestrel, capsule viscosity, and molecular weight were measured. RESULTS The 4-cm implant provided serum concentrations of levonorgestrel ranging from 0.65 ng/mL shortly after insertion to 0.20 ng/mL at 12 months, but the 2.5-cm implant resulted in levels too low for contraception. The 4-cm implant suppressed ovulation in approximately 80% of cycles over 1 year of use, but the 2.5-cm implant failed to suppress ovulation. The implants were rapidly and easily inserted and removed. They retained structural integrity through 1 year of use. Of 48 subjects, 32 had abnormal bleeding patterns; the mean number of days of bleeding per month was 7 with 23 days between episodes. Women using capronor maintained normal metabolic parameters except that low-density lipoprotein decreased slightly. CONCLUSIONS The 4.0-cm implant is a promising contraceptive. There were no important metabolic effects, but there were bothersome minor side effects typical of progestin-only contraception.


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1995

A randomized trial comparing misoprostol three and seven days after methotrexate for early abortion

Mitchell D. Creinin; Eric Vittinghoff; Stephanie Galbraith; Cynthia Klaisle


Obstetrics & Gynecology | 1997

Medical abortion with oral methotrexate and vaginal misoprostol

Mitchell D. Creinin; Eric Vittinghoff; Eric A. Schaff; Cynthia Klaisle; Philip D. Darney; Catherine Dean


Archive | 2001

Original research article Levonorgestrel concentrations during 7 years of continuous use of Jadelle contraceptive implants

Irving Sivin; Livia Wan; Sirpa Ranta; Francisco Alvarez; Vivian Brache; Daniel R. Mishell; Philip D. Darney; Arijit Biswas; Soledad Diaz; Orawan Kiriwat; Manee Piya Anant; Cynthia Klaisle; Margarita Pavez; Janet Schechter


Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey | 1999

Contraception With Two Levonorgestrel Rod Implants: A 5-Year Study in the United States and Dominican Republic

Irving Sivin; Francisco Alvarez; Daniel R. Mishell; Philip D. Darney; Livia Wan; Vivian Brache; Maria Lacarra; Cynthia Klaisle; Janet Stern

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Daniel R. Mishell

University of Southern California

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Francisco Alvarez

State University of Campinas

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Maria Lacarra

University of Southern California

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