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Pak Chung Ho

Researcher at University of Hong Kong

Publications -  313
Citations -  11478

Pak Chung Ho is an academic researcher from University of Hong Kong. The author has contributed to research in topics: Misoprostol & Pregnancy. The author has an hindex of 56, co-authored 311 publications receiving 10649 citations. Previous affiliations of Pak Chung Ho include The Family Planning Association of Hong Kong & Queen Mary University of London.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Pharmacokinetics of different routes of administration of misoprostol.

TL;DR: The new sublingual route of administration of misoprostol demonstrated a great potential to be developed into a method of medical abortion.
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Misoprostol: Pharmacokinetic profiles, effects on the uterus and side-effects

TL;DR: Studies of misoprostol's pharmacokinetics and effects on uterine activity have demonstrated the properties of the drug after various routes of administration, and can help to discover the optimal dose and route of administration of misiprostol for individual clinical applications.
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Vaginal misoprostol compared with oral misoprostol in termination of second-trimester pregnancy*

TL;DR: Vaginal misoprostol is more effective than oral misopostol in termination of second-trimester pregnancy after pretreatment with mifepristone, but more women preferred the oral route.
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A randomised controlled trial of empowerment training for Chinese abused pregnant women in Hong Kong

TL;DR: Evaluating the effectiveness of an empowerment intervention in reducing intimate partner violence and improving health status in women and girls in Northern Ireland finds it important to consider the impact on women's physical and mental health.
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High serum oestradiol concentrations in fresh IVF cycles do not impair implantation and pregnancy rates in subsequent frozen–thawed embryo transfer cycles

TL;DR: High serum oestradiol concentrations in fresh IVF cycles may adversely affect implantation and pregnancy rates and Embryo quality seemed unaffected as excess embryos from different groups had similar implantationand pregnancy rates in frozen-thawed embryo transfer cycles.