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Women in Menopause Need Hormone Replacement

12/21/09

Link: http://www.billboardmama.com/women-in-menopause-need-hormone-replacement-p-449.html

Are you a female that's 45 years of age or older and experiencing any of the following hormone imbalance symptoms? If so, then you probably will want to consider something gaining popularity called rhythmic bio-identical hormone replacement that is designed for women in menopause.

Check the following hormone imbalance symptoms to see if you experience: anxiety, allergies, foggy brain, weight gain, depression, dizziness, endometriosis, dry skin, fibrocystic breasts, hair loss, and headaches, suppressed libido, osteoporosis, or urinary tract infections. These symptoms are largely caused by the aberrant relationship between the levels of progesterone and estrogen in your body - and are typically associated with menopause.

Here's how it works ... The two female hormones, estrogen and progesterone, co-exist in a very fragile balance, and any variations of that balance can have an impact on your health. The amounts of these hormones that the woman's body produces every month can change, depending on factors such as age, nutrition, stress, exercise or ovulation or the lack of it.

At perimopause, our hormones begin to fall off and put them back to the same range as is the case during the time between adrenarchy and puberty. As a woman's estrogen levels goes back into that same range again, she may still have some regular periods, or periods that come at fairly regular intervals during the year, but the fact is, that she's possibly no longer ovulating. This means that the woman can't be pregnant anymore.

These peri-menopausal periods are like the ones a girl experienced when her reproductive engine was developing as a teenager. During time, her adrenal glands were trying to jump-start your brain to turn on your ovaries, and once the ovaries kicked in, she had enough estrogen generated by a full basket of eggs.

At midlife, a woman just has sufficient estrogen to create a thin lining in the uterus - but not enough to peak. Then comes the time when the periods are shortened, breasts are lumpier, and the mind is foggier - a phase called perimenopause. If a woman does not peak estrogen with regularity, she is in peri-menopause. The collapse of the rest of a woman's eggs are basically due to the loss of rhythm during the perimenopausal stage. The remainder of the eggs are used up, with the excessive action of FSH. It's about this time, when she'll start to hot flashes, because that's how her system effectively shuts down for good. In rare instances, it takes ten years before menopause is reached.

Menopause is defined as the cessation of menstruation for 12 consecutive months, in clinical terms. Menopause signals the end of a woman's reproductive period, and this normally happens naturally around the age of 52 when her ovaries stop producing estrogen, and there are no more fertile eggs. In terms of blood work, menopause is clinically diagnosed by an FSH score that is higher than five.

Today, a woman can stop the aging process and not experience the symptoms of hormone imbalance and menopause with hormone replacement. But the extent at which she can fool nature (covering the fact that she no longer has eggs) is only to some extent - if the hormones are replaced in the same way as they would be generated in youth, in the exact amounts and a certain rhythm. This is the premise behind rhythmic, bioidentical hormone therapy. To further explain, various amounts of estrogen and progesterone are administered at different days of the month. Women using this rhythmic cycling also will get their periods again, just like when they were young.

Women taking rhythmic bioidentical hormone replacement therapy are raving about how wonderful they now feel. No more sleep deprivation due to hormone-related insomnia and hot flashes. No more brain fig or depression. Their skin looks soft supple and glowing. And more often than not, women who had experienced the dreadful symptoms of menopause are now claiming that they got their lives back.

Rhythmic bioidentical hormones could certainly be the real "fountain of youth."