Publication | Closed Access
Smoking, Oral Contraceptives, and Obesity
58
Citations
15
References
1975
Year
Hormonal ContraceptiveOral ContraceptiveRelative ImportanceReproductive HealthGynecologyMenstrual CycleWhite Blood CellObesityTobacco ControlContraceptionBody CompositionOral ContraceptivesHematologyPublic HealthTobacco UseOvarian HormoneEpidemiologyMedicineWomen's Health
Data from 14,961 healthy women were analyzed to determine the relative importance of factors that alter the white blood cell (WBC) count. The effects of smoking, oral contraceptive use, and obesity were most striking. A total leukocyte count greater than 10,00/cu mm was found in 44% of obese, heavily smoking women who took oral contraceptives (central 95% of the distribution was 5,800 to 14,200/cu mm) as compared to 2% of women without these attributes (3,500 to 9,400/cu mm). Other factors such as age, time of day, phase of the menstrual cycle, and red blood cell variables were of lesser significance. The use of noncontraceptive estrogenic hormones did not affect the WBC count. Recognition of these findings is important because excessive laboratory studies, lost physician time, and patient inconvenience may thereby be avoided.
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