Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Diana Bianchi"


3 mentions found


She was shocked when the test results came back. Test results can come back as “atypical” for many reasons, such as noncancerous growths like uterine fibroids. Instead, she enrolled in a study at the National Institutes of Health that involved examining women who received abnormal prenatal DNA-sequencing test results like hers. Sequencing results showing a particularly “chaotic” pattern across multiple chromosomes were observed in 47 of the 51 participants with cancer. Their treatment should not be delayed because they are pregnant,” Bianchi said.
Persons: Dr, Naseem Khorram’s, nephrologist, Khorram, , , , Hodgkin, ” Khorram, She’s, Diana Bianchi, Eunice Kennedy, Bianchi, you’ve, ” Bianchi, Britta Weigelt, ” Weigelt, “ I’m, Weigelt, Emeline, gynecologic, NYU Langone’s, Aviki, Sarah Kim, Sanjay Gupta, ” Kim Organizations: CNN, National Institutes of Health, New England, of Medicine, National, of Child Health, Human, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, NYU, NYU Langone’s Perlmutter Cancer, American Cancer Society, Get CNN, CNN Health Locations: Los Angeles, Long, United States
However, the longer menstrual cycle, typically about a month long, didn't necessarily increase the number of days of bleeding, according to NIH. A change in menstrual cycle length of eight days or less is considered within the normal range of variation, according to NIH. Women who received both vaccine doses in a single menstrual period saw their cycle increase by 3.91 days. The changes in menstrual cycle length did not differ between vaccines. The researchers had released preliminary findings in January suggesting an association between Covid vaccination and increased menstrual cycle length, but the study published this week confirmed the link.
CNN —People who got the Covid-19 vaccine reported slightly longer menstrual cycles, but the change was temporary, according to a new study published Tuesday in the journal BMJ Medicine. “We found no differences in menses length in any group of vaccinated individuals, compared with the unvaccinated cohort,” the study says. The changes to the length of the cycle didn’t remain in the cycle after vaccination, the authors said – apart from in the group that received two doses in one cycle. For the vaccinated cohort, they looked at three prevaccine cycles and at least the first Covid-19 vaccine dose cycle. Nearly two-thirds of the 15,000 vaccinated participants had received the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine, although participants had also received the Johnson & Johnson, Moderna and Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccines among others.
Total: 3