A Lecturer from the Department of Chemistry Publishes a Scientific Article on the Relationship of Repetitive Projection in the Recurrent Multicystic Scene

Scientific Article


The educational staff in the College of Education for Pure Sciences/Department of Chemistry, Assistant Professor Dr. (Rehab Jassem Muhammad) has accepted the publication of a scientific article titled (The Relationship of Recurrent Miscarriage with Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome) by the Scientific Articles Committee at the Presidency of Karbala University after the article fulfilled all publication conditions. (Prof. Rehab Jassim Muhammad) stated that recurrent miscarriage is defined as the loss of two or more consecutive pregnancies, affecting 1% of couples trying to conceive. It was believed that 1-2% of pregnancies in the second trimester end in miscarriage. Before the 24 week stage. Infertility and miscarriage are two types of reproductive failure with almost the same causes. According to experts, PCOS is one of the diseases associated with infertility and miscarriage, so patients who have undergone repeated miscarriages have a higher probability of infertility. Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a hormonal disorder caused by a high level of androgens (male hormone) and an increase in the ratio of LH / FSH hormones in females of childbearing age. Signs include lack of egg development (before maturation), ovarian cysts, irregular cycle Menstruation, infertility, excessive hair growth on the face, and acne. Women with PCOS are at risk for fertility problems (menstrual disorders, ovulation failure, late menopause, endometrial cancer, and infertility), metabolic problems (insulin resistance, type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, and cardiovascular disease), Physical problems (central obesity, acne, hair loss, baldness), psychological issues (depression, stress, anxiety). Menstrual dysfunction and clinical or laboratory hyperandrogenism are the main components of the diagnosis of this syndrome. Most women with PCOS have one or two clinical symptoms. The most common clinical finding is menstrual disturbances, which generally begin at or shortly after menstruation and can present as hypomenorrhea, amenorrhea or polymenorrhea, until the menstrual cycle becomes regular. Women with PCOS are three times more likely to have a pregnancy loss than women without PCOS.