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Prescription and over-the-counter drugs
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Originally Published: May 24, 2002
~ Last Updated / Reviewed on: October 27, 2004
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Dear Alice,
Do you know anything about the Drug DES, taken by some women to enable them to have children? It seemed to have prevented miscarriages and the Dr. recommended this drug in the 1940s. Now women and men are having problems, for instance, cancer, etc. Do you have any more info on it? Dear Reader, You're exactly right. DES (it's fifty-cent name is diethylstilbestrol) was used between about 1940 and 1971 in pregnant women to prevent miscarriages. The drug is a laboratory-made form of the female hormone, estrogen. Nowadays, there are strict warnings against giving DES to pregnant women. It's still used for other conditions, such as problems with menstruation or menopause, problems with the functioning of the ovaries (primary ovarian failure), and as chemotherapy to treat some advanced cancers of the breast and prostate. Originally, doctors thought giving DES to pregnant women could prevent miscarriage, stop pre-term labor, and treat other complications of pregnancy. Unfortunately, not only did the drug prove to be useless for these conditions, it also turned out to be harmful to the baby's developing reproductive organs. Both boy and girl babies are affected, although the problems don't show up until puberty or later. Sons of mothers who were given DES may have the following problems:
Daughters of mothers who were given DES may have the following problems:
If you think your mother was given DES during her pregnancy with you, you need to be carefully monitored every year, beginning at around fourteen years of age.
A number of resources can provide more information on DES-related concerns, including:
The Registry for Research on Hormonal Transplacental Carcinogenesis (Clear Cell Cancer Registry) Margaret Lee Braun's book, DES Stories: Faces and Voices of People Exposed to Diethylstilbestrol Judith Helfand's documentary, A Healthy Baby Girl
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