Is is legal for a transgendered person to get HRT in Texas?
July 2, 2009 by Helpful Menopause Tips
Filed under Hormones, Estrogen & Hysterectomy
My friend is transgendered and she is not sure if HRT is legal in Texas for transgendered people. Is it?
Memory Loss Perimenopause
How To Use Progesterone Cream To Stop Menopausal Symptoms
July 2, 2009 by Helpful Menopause Tips
Filed under Hormones, Estrogen & Hysterectomy
The use of progesterone cream helps to replace the progesterone in your body. By introducing progesterone into the body you help to restore the natural balance between progesterone and estrogen. The fluctuations of these two hormones are responsible for the majority of all symptoms of menopause and perimenopause. The combination of herbal remedies and the application of a naturally occurring progesterone cream can help restore your body’s natural balance.
Progesterone cream is a moisturizing cream that is based on the Mexican Yam root. How to use progesterone cream most effectively is to apply it to your face and hands. It can also be applied to your chest, abdomen, inner thigh and even your arms. This cream will not only help keep your skin free of dry patches but also raise the amount of naturally occurring progesterone in your body. This restoration of progesterone in your body is what helps relieve the symptoms of menopause.
There are several makers of this type of cream and you should look for the amount of progesterone in the cream and what its source is. A good cream will be aloe vera based for the moisturizing effect but it should also not clog your pores. Creams like this should also be fragrance free and should be hypoallergenic. You do not want to risk an allergic reaction to the treatment. You also don’t want to go around smelling like you have been using a progesterone cream treatment. We all know what Ben-Gay smells like.
The reason for the use of a cream to deliver progesterone is that is can be absorbed into the skin in just a few minutes. This process also allows the progesterone to bypass the liver and go straight to the specific receptors that need the progesterone in the first place.
Progesterone cream is one of the easiest steps to take in combatting menopausal symptoms. How to use progesterone cream most effectively is to simply apply it once a day in the recommended amount. You still need to be careful with anything you use to treat your menopause symptoms to make sure that you are getting what you pay for. Keeping a symptom diary will show you over time if the treatment is effective. Always be sure to let your doctor know what you are doing so you can avoid any complications from drug interactions with other meds.
Thanks to Linda Bruton for contributing this article to our Menopause blog:
Endometriosis Part 90 - What is Estrogen Therapy (ert)?
July 2, 2009 by Helpful Menopause Tips
Filed under Hormones, Estrogen & Hysterectomy
Estrogen is produced by the ovaries and adrenal glands. It helps to regulate the menstrual cycle and reproductive organs in woman’s body. The removal of ovaries causes hormone imbalance of reproductive system resulting in all kinds of symptoms of menopause. In that case, your doctor may suggest estrogen replacement therapy(ERT)
I. What is estrogen therapy
Estrogen replacement therapy helps to restore the balance of hormones in the women reproductive cycle caused by menopause state or temporary menopause state or the removal of ovaries after hysterectomy. By giving the additional estrogen to the patient body through injected, oral or patches, it helps to reduce the symptom caused by low level of estrogen.
Since women with hysterectomy may require different amount of estrogen intake, please make sure check with your doctor to see which form of estrogen therapy is worked well for you.
II. Types of estrogen hormone
1. Estrone
Estrone is produced by adrenal glands mostly in body fat and muscles. Without supporting from the ovaries,the level of estrone is dropped significantly . Low level of estrone causes hot flush.
2. Estradiol
Estradiol is produced by the ovaries. Since the ovaries are removed, level of estradiol also is dropped significantly. Therefore, you doctor may suggest entinyl estradiol, which is a synthetic estrogen to be taken because its effects are similar to those of estradiol. There are other kind of estrogen, such as plant base or animal mixture of estradiol and estrone (conjugated estrogen) which can be converted to estradiol by our body including sodium estrone sulphate and sodium equilin sulfate cenestin, enjuvia, premarin.
3. Estriol
Estriol is another estrogen hormone that is produced by placenta. It is produced in great amount during pregnancy. Estriol is an important indicator of a fetus’s well-being.
II. Benefits and Risks
Unlike women in menopause, women with removal of ovaries normally only need to take a small amount of estrogen.
1. Benefits
a) Reduce hot flash
b) Reduce vagina dryness
c) Risk of itching around the vagina area
d) Reduce the risk of osteoporosis
2. Risks
a) Increase risk of breast cancer
b) Increase risk of blood clots in lung and leg
c) Risk of heart attach and stroke
d) Increase the risk of live damage
e) And sometimes unusual vagina bleeding.
I hope this information will help. If you need more information or insurance advices, please follow my article series of the above subject at my home page at:
http://medicaladvisorjournals.blogspot.com
To read the series of endometriosis visit:
http://endometriosisa.blogspot.com
Thanks to Kyle J. Norton for contributing this article to our Menopause blog:
All rights reserved. Any reproducing of this article must have the author name and all the links intact.
“Let Take Care Your Health, Your Health Will Take Care You” Kyle J. Norton
I have been studying natural remedies for disease prevention for over 20 years and working as a financial consultant since 1990. Master degree in Mathematics, teaching and tutoring math at colleges and universities before joining insurance industries.
what are other special tasks forces in the fedral agenices other than fbi hrt?
July 2, 2009 by Helpful Menopause Tips
Filed under Hormones, Estrogen & Hysterectomy
the fbi has the their hrt
what do the marshalls dea AFT etc have?
Herbal Remedies For Hot Flashes
Acne & Menopause - Learn Why Balancing Progesterone & Estrogen Can Help
July 1, 2009 by Helpful Menopause Tips
Filed under Hormones, Estrogen & Hysterectomy
Menopause and Acne: Causes
Do not be alarmed if you witness acne during menopause, as it is quite common. Acne is linked with a menopausal woman taking HRT (Hormone Replacement Therapy) treatment. The HRT has progestin in the treatment and can cause the skin to breakout in a rash or acne, if excessive androgen is produced. However, treatment is possible through a form of Vitamin A, called retinaic acid.
Apart from acne during menopause, many women suffer from discomfort caused due to flaky or itchy skin. This condition called, seborrhea, is considered a close cousin of initial acne. Topical creams, especially those containing progesterone, are helpful in clearing it up. Estrogen use should be limited for those wishing to prevent the breakout of acne, as estrogen used in a cream form can result in skin discoloration, rashes, as well as oily skin.
Any change in the normal hormonal setting can trigger off acne during menopause. It can be due to issues like imbalanced nutrition or emotional dysfunction, like unresolved relationships or lack of physical exercise that affects the metabolism, and thereby disrupts proper functioning of hormones.
Menopause and Acne: Treatments
Menopause and acne are problems that have led many women to resort to counseling for clarification as a menopause related issue. Health care practitioners acknowledge that this skin eruption may happen due to the change of life. Menopause is medically considered as a stage in a woman’s life, during which significant hormonal changes take place, and a woman slowly loses her fertility, or ability to conceive.
The reason for hormonal dysfunction is linked with the female sex hormones: estrogens and progesterone production decline and lead to problems in the skin and organs. Thus, when menopause sets in, there is a gradual shutdown of the ovaries and the hormone deficiency is permanent. This hormone deficiency triggers off other typical symptoms of menopause and mood swings, hot flashes and adult female acne occurs.
To further understand the underlying causes of adult female acne, it is necessary to follow how one of the strongest androgens, testosterone, causes the skin to produce more sebum. Sebum is actually skin oil, the increased production of which is responsible for blocking skin cells, and making it difficult for a woman to slough off dead cells.
When these skin cells are caught in the pores and hair follicles, already filled with excess oil, it results in pimples and acne. A plug of waxy oil and skin cells is formed, and this causes inflammation and infection. If not treated in time, the pimples become a full-blown case of acne.
Menopause and acne in women need not be a cause of distress any more because the estrogen deficiency causing acne breakouts, loss of skin firmness and texture are a cosmetic problem which has new treatments and effective cures available today.
Thanks to Cathy Taylor for contributing this article to our Menopause blog:
Cathy Taylor is a marketing consultant and freelance writer and can be reached at creativecommunications@cox.net




