Determining if you
need hormone therapy. To purchase the BHRT program
Click
here
You
know your body, and you can feel when your hormones are not in balance. Do
you suffer from any of the following: PMS, frustration, anxiety, insomnia, low sex drive,
decreased energy, head hair loss, hair growing on the face, dry mouth,
vaginal dryness, hot flashes, night sweats, mild depression or sever
depression, headaches, mood
swings, breast tenderness, etc.. Are these issues affecting your quality of
life and your precious relationships? Have you had a
hysterectomy and been told you no longer cycle as a result? We will
teach you that you cycle until you die, no matter what a doctor removes from
your body. Do your symptoms vary throughout your menstrual cycle if you
still have your period or, if your periods have stopped, do you notice
certain symptoms more at a certain time of the month more than others?
If you are entering perimenopause, are
you experiencing new or different symptoms?
Perimenopause is the period of hormonal imbalance that leads up to
menopause. It can start at almost any age and create a myriad of symptoms
that may appear unrelated. Are the hormones or hormone related
medications you are currently taking not providing you with the relief you
expected? Did you know that even if you are not taking Hormones you are
being exposed to them daily, from the food you eat, products you use to the
environment? Click
Here For Female Endocrine System
The way to look at BHRT, Bioidentical Hormone Replacement Therapy is from puberty
until death, a healthy woman’s body is making its own natural hormones
in synchrony and balance, without giving her cancer, heart disease or
strokes. What the Anti-Aging Clinic professionals are attempting to regain
is this natural balance as closely as possible, using Mother Nature and not
harsh synthetic drugs.
Conventional HRT in the medical sickness industry not only failed in the
matter of improving hormonal balance and health, but also by
causing cancer. The sickness industry fails to measure hormones correctly and they fail to
prescribe physiologic doses of hormones and by prescribing synthetics
hormone drugs, foreign to the human body, not hormones found-in-nature, that cause a long list of unwanted side
effects, up to, and including death.
What we recommend is to first measure the complete one-month cycle,
utilizing a 11-saliva panels taken over the course of one-month to test for hormone levels
that will indicate what the hormonal imbalances are. Then we begin
correcting those
imbalances, using natural to the body hormones in physiologic doses, which
means ordinary doses that the body would naturally produce itself, placed under
the tongue in micronized lozenge form, that was compounded by our
compounding pharmacist.
The Women’s Health Initiative (WHI) study brought attention to the dangers
of synthetic hormone replacement drugs and was canceled because of a high risk of
breast cancer, heart disease and stroke associated with using synthetic HRT
(hormone replacement therapy). The study analyzed the health of 16,000 women
ages from 50 to 79 years. After five years, those using HRT (Premarin and Provera
or PremPro) had a 29 percent higher risk of breast cancer, a 26 percent
higher risk of heart disease, and a 41 percent higher risk of stroke.
To emphasize a bit more, nearly 40,000 women were harmed by taking these
drugs. That’s an epidemic and doesn’t include all the women who suffered
from weight gain, fatigue, depression, irritability, headaches, insomnia,
bloating, low thyroid, low libido, and gallbladder disease and blood clots.
One of the most disturbing aspects of this scenario is that it was created
due to the carelessness of conventional medical sickness industry practice, which dictated –
without good supporting evidence of safety and efficacy – that dictated any woman
over 50 complaining about anything remotely related to menopause, to be put on
a one size fit all HRT drug. Their hormones weren’t measured improperly with
blood sample, which did not lead the doctor to find out which
ones the woman needed or how much, and they were subjected to the mentality
of
one-dose-fits-all mindset that created estrogen levels to rise dangerously
high, for millions of
women. Hormonal measurement in the medical sickness industry community is typically:
blood tests, which only measure the serum, the watery part of the blood and
progesterone is carried in the red blood cells, not in the serum. Then
taking one sample of blood would give only a snapshot of the cycle. The
cycle that is up and
down all month long, which, depending on the time during the 30-day cycle that the blood was
taken, could only indicate what it was for that one day. The most accurate way to measure hormonal levels is with an
11-saliva
panel test, where samples are collected on various days set by the document
provide with the test of the
month, which measures your active or bioavailable hormones through out the
complete female cycle.
Furthermore, the efficacy of natural progesterone in hormone replacement has
been totally ignored in favor of the synthetic patentable (and therefore more
profitable) counterparts known as progestin's. Natural
estrogen in the body stimulates cells to grow
in the first 14 days and progesterone stimulates the cells
toward differentiation,
which is an anti-cancer property. Cancer cells are undifferentiated, and
thus grow without control. Progesterone, which is natural to our body,
encourages cells to die when they're supposed to (which cancer cells don't
do).
It is easier to see why testing is vital when you examine estrogen
dominance, which describes a condition where a woman can have deficient,
normal or excessive estrogen, but has little or no progesterone to balance
its effects in the body. Even a woman with low estrogen levels can have
estrogen dominance symptoms if she doesn’t have enough progesterone.
Without prior knowledge reveled by our thorough questionnaire and 30-day saliva testing, giving her a one-size-fits all
hormone, could prove devastating.
Some Symptoms, which accompany estrogen dominance, are:
Water
retention, bloating, Dry eyes, Sluggish
metabolism,
Thyroid
dysfunction mimicking hypothyroidism, Hair Loss,
Fatigue, Headaches, Infertility, Fat gain,
especially around the abdomen, hips and thighs, Cold hands
and feet as a symptom of thyroid dysfunction, Irregular
menstrual periods, Early onset
of menstruation, Decreased
sex drive, Foggy
thinking, Insomnia, Memory loss, Mood swings, Depression
with anxiety or agitation, Autoimmune
disorders,
Acceleration of the aging process,
Osteoporosis, Polycystic
ovaries,
Premenopausal bone loss, PMS, Allergies, Mineral
deficiencies, Gallbladder
disease, Fibrocystic
breasts, Breast
tenderness, Breast
cancer, Cervical
dysplasia, Uterine
cancer, Uterine
fibroids, Endometrial
(uterine) cancer, Increased
blood clotting (increasing risk of strokes)
The environment, chemicals and some food affect estrogen.
Clarification & "Disclaimer": As a result of various
science-planning activities (within and outside government), confusion often
develops with regard to the relationship between
Pharmaceuticals and Personal Care Products (PPCPs)
and "endocrine disrupting compounds". Only a small subset of Pharmaceuticals
and (PPCPs) are known, or suspected of being direct-acting
Endocrine Disrupting Compounds (EDCs) (primarily synthetic steroids and
other synthetic hormones, acting as a hormone or anti-hormone modulating
mimics -- agonists or antagonists, respectively). While many xenobiotics can
have a wide range of ultimate, indirect
effects on the endocrine system, few have direct effects (i.e., serve as
immediate endocrine agonists/antagonists at the hormone-receptor level). As
an example, the inhibition or induction (such as by triazine herbicides) of
P450 aromatase can effect changes in androgen/estrogen ratios; this effect
is not at the receptor level. It is important to note that PPCPs and
direct-acting EDCs are NOT synonymous, and the toxicological concerns are
usually totally different also known as environmental estrogens.
Environmental estrogens are, endocrine-disruptors, endocrine-modulators,
estrogenic mimics, eco-estrogens, environmental hormones, xenoestrogens,
hormone-related toxicants, hormonally active agents (phytoestrogens being a
subset). Please review
Soy!
Furthermore, the endocrine system (and its interconnected signaling
pathways) is extraordinarily complex and cannot be easily distilled to a
simple issue of "disruption" or "modulation". While "disruptors" can act
directly at the hormone-receptor level, they can also act indirectly via a
plethora of alternative routes (e.g., nervous system, immune system,
specific cellular transporter systems), most of which are not always
considered in the scope of many of the current definitions of EDCs.
Endocrine disruption, in general, is narrowly viewed as a
reproductive/developmental issue. An excellent overview of EDCs can be found
at the "Environmental Estrogens and other Hormones" web site
(Bioenvironmental Research at Tulane and Xavier Universities): http://www.tmc.tulane.edu/ECME/
eehome. Whether EDCs represent a meaningful way to classify toxicants with
respect to environmental risk -- whether they play a significant
toxicological role in environmental exposure (especially for humans) --
continues to be actively debated.
WHY ARE OMEGA-3's and ANTIOXIDANTS
important?
Consultation Fee
[disclaimer] “These statements have not
been evaluated by FDA. Treatments or
products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or
prevent any disease.”