Posts Tagged ‘estrogen’

DHEA…we thought so all along

Tuesday, January 3rd, 2012 by Bat Sheva Marcus LMSW MPH PhD

A new small scale study out of Italy seemed to show that DHEA can be helpful with menopausal symptom and can also positively affect a woman’s sexual desire.

http://www.healthnews.com/en/news/DHEA-Hormone-Therapy-May-Be-Menopause-Magic/0UuHws6wf6pBU1vtwcDIcD/

So why is anyone surprised? The truth is that DHEA is a precursor hormone (or a “mother hormone” – but that title might suggest that it yells at you if you don’t clean your room and DHEA definitely does not do that!) which converts in your body to estrogen, progesterone and testosterone. So yes, taking DHEA every day is going to have an impact on your hormones. The fact that it is a hormone that is identified by the FDA as merely an “herbal supplement” is what should be surprising.

Be that as it may, for women who are suffering from the effects of low hormones, either with menopausal symptoms, low libido, dry skin or memory loss, DHEA might indeed give them relief. But keep in mind one caveat. It really and truly is a hormone. Don’t mess around with it alone too much. If you are serious about using it see your doctor, or better yet, see a specialist. Make sure you are having regular blood tests and someone is monitoring your hormones to make sure you are in a normal range and checking you regularly for side effects.

And keep your eyes out for more studies – it will be interesting to watch as DHEA comes of age.

The Estrogen Conversation

Monday, June 21st, 2010 by Ilene Rosenthal, Marketing

OK, gal pals.

You know,  I’m not a doctor.  So this is not a recommendation.  But I am in a tizzy over the recent article from the NY Times Magazine on April 18, 2010  on estrogen replacement in perimenopausal or early menopausal women. The article is called The Estrogen Dilemma, written by Cynthia Gorley.  

 The article is balanced and intelligent.  It details the research errors in the W.H.I study of the early 90′s that damned hormone replacement therapy [the misinformation surrounds the age of the women in the study (10+ years beyond menopause), the kind of therapy (the pregnant horse urine-derived hormone), and how conclusions about stroke and cardiac problems were surmised].

I don’t know about you, but I’m wrestling with this strange phase and wondering about how to manage it.  And there I was, in the voices of the scientists and the reporter in this article.  It is balanced, yes, and delineates all the uncertainties in any hormonal regimen.  But make no mistake:  when the author talks about Alzheimers, my phone is dialing my gynecologist asap.

Here’s a blip from the article.  The author is referring to her conversation with a woman, a scientist studying the brain at USC:

 ”We were sitting in a campus garage in her Prius one day, and I asked her what made her so sure her own midlife difficulties — she had the hot flashes, which were obvious, but also the sleep disruption and the infuriating distractibility — were the product of hormonal events, not some womanly existential crisis. We get a lot of that, societally. It’s meant to be empathetic. Your role in life is changing, Mrs. Brain Seized by Aliens! Your children are growing up, you’re buying expensive wrinkle cream, ice cream makes you gain weight now, of course you’re distraught! “Because with estrogen — ” Brinton looked at me sharply, and then smiled — “I don’t have attention-deficit disorder.”  ”

Read on, girlfriends.  Let me know your thoughts.

 http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/18/magazine/18estrogen-t.html

Bioidentical Hormones

Tuesday, September 29th, 2009 by Bat Sheva Marcus LMSW MPH PhD

There is so much confusion and misinformation when it comes to “bioidentical hormones.” Let me see if I can set the record straight.

• “Bioidentical hormones” does not mean that the hormones are “organic.”
• “Bioidentical hormones” does not mean that the hormones are “natural.”
• “Bioidentical hormones” does not mean that the hormones are “not really hormones.”

“Bioidentical hormones” means that the chemical makeup of the hormones exactly matches the chemical makeup in the same hormones in your body. It can be man-made but the molecular components are exactly the same as that same hormone in your body. For example, if you look at bioidentical estrogen under a microscope it would look exactly the same as the estrogen your body makes. It could have been created all chemically, in a laboratory, but the components of the compound match your body.

“Hmmmm…” you ask, why would anyone make non-bioidentical hormones to replace those in your body. Well, for one thing bioidentical hormones can’t be patented. The same way you can’t patent water, unless you add some flavorings to it, you can’t patent estrogen unless there is something different about your estrogen. So drug companies are incented to change the chemical compound. Sometimes makers of specific hormones suggest that the difference they have made is a “good” difference and thus justify the changes. We haven’t found that to be the case. In general we find that women seem to respond better to bioidentical hormones.

But don’t worry about the drug companies. Now that many realize that women prefer the bioidentical compounds they have found ways to patent their product by developing better or unique delivery systems: a specific cream to hold the compound, a patch, a pellet.

So, if a practitioner wants to prescribe a hormone, you can ask if it’s bioidentical…and now you’ll even know what that means.