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. 2009:2009:bcr07.2008.0484.
doi: 10.1136/bcr.07.2008.0484. Epub 2009 Mar 5.

Osteoporosis in a young woman after 6 years of levonorgestrel administration from intrauterine devices?

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Osteoporosis in a young woman after 6 years of levonorgestrel administration from intrauterine devices?

Christine Ursula Greiner et al. BMJ Case Rep. 2009.

Abstract

This report describes a young woman who developed dysmenorrhoea at the age of 12. She received a levonorgestrel (LNg)-releasing intrauterine device at the age of 21, and this was replaced twice within 8 years. At the age of 28, she started to have multiple bone and joint pain (predominantly low back pain), which, after intensive diagnostic of blood parameters and bone CT, turned out to result - from a manifest (mild) osteoporosis. Since the woman developed very low (postmenopausal) oestradiol levels during the presence of the gestagen-releasing device and encountered normalisation of oestradiol production after removal, suppression of the hypophysial-ovarian axis is proposed as the cause of both lack of oestradiol and osteoporosis. This poses the question of whether long-term use of such devices in young women may result in reduced bone density in the early phases of life, paving the way to serious osteoporosis at menopause.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Plasma concentrations of progesterone, oestradiol and luteinising hormone (LH) of the patient at the end of an 8-year exposure to an intrauterine device (IUD) containing levonorgestrel (Mirena; HRT, hormone replacement therapy). The circled x on the right depicts subsequent concentration measurement of oestradiol (E2) 1 year after removal of the intrauterine device.

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