What Women Need To Know About HRT
HRT is rightfully back in the spotlight after years of unwarranted fear around using estrogen during perimenopause and menopause BUT it’s not appropriate or mandatory for every woman. Every woman deserves to understand all her options and while HRT is an important piece of the puzzle, it is not the entire puzzle. HRT doesn’t get us out of lifting weights, figuring out how to balance our blood sugar, optimizing our gut health and all of those other things. HRT might make it easier in some ways but the conversation about midlife for women is bigger than HRT as not only are there many other facets to our health besides HRT, there are some things that simply are not fixed by an estrogen patch. Midlife is a reckoning and a time to recalibrate and refine. Like so much about being a woman: it’s complicated. This article helps you glean a framework for HRT and beyond.
Understanding Bioidentical vs. Synthetic Hormone Replacement Therapy
With so many options available for women who want to use hormones during perimenopause and menopause, it’s important to know what’s different about an estrogen patch vs. an oral pill vs. a compounded cream. Most importantly, women need to know that there is a different risk profile for synthetic hormones vs. bioidentical hormones (those molecularly identical to your own estrogen and progesterone) as well as different risks associated with different delivery systems, i.e. transdermal estrogen doesn’t have the same risks as taking an oral estrogen pill. This article will arm you with the info to have a better conversation with your provider as well give you a big picture view of all of your options, a better understanding of common terminology (systemic vs. local, MHT vs. HRT, etc.) and what options are right for you.
Pros And Cons Of Pellet Therapy for HRT
Pellets inserted under the skin are a popular, though often expensive, way to get bioidentical hormone therapy in midlife. In addition to concerns about financial incentives for docs using pellets, the biggest concerns are often sky high levels in a woman’s system with this delivery method and no way to manage that once the pellet is in. While it can be a quick shot of hormones that can get you feeling better fast and it doesn’t require daily application, side effects of too much hormone are all too common – some of which are irreversible. This article covers the pros and some very real concerns with pellet therapy.
Listen to the Dr Brooke Show episode #448
Are Supplements A Viable Alternative to HRT?
Wondering if any of these seemingly miraculous midlife supplements that social media is serving up to you would help you with symptoms or issues you’re still dealing with in midlife? The answer is: maybe. This article will help you know what common ingredients in female hormone balance supplements actually do and how to know if they might be the right fit for your particular issues or concerns. It also covers how over the counter options compare to taking actual hormones.
Get the FREE Guide to using supplements to support your female hormones. Listen to the Dr Brooke Show episode #434
Does HRT Cause Cancer?
In the 1990s the Women’s Health Initiative began and it concluded in 2005 with what have now been deemed flawed conclusions about HRT causing cancer, heart disease and stroke. Nevertheless this created a panic and women everywhere stopped their HRT and we’ve been scared ever since. It’s important to understand what this initiative was intended to study, which was hormone impacts on chronic disease and NOT on how hormones can improve quality of life in perimenopausal women. The women in the study were not typical women pursuing HRT today and the hormones used are not what’s currently recommended either. This article will help you understand how hormones actually impact your health and what risks do and do not come with them.
What To Eat For Perimenopause And Menopause
Weight gain is among the most common concerns for women in midlife and the internet is rife with advice on this topic and while HRT is helpful, it doesn’t get us out of balancing our blood sugar or eating in a way that doesn’t exacerbate inflammation. As well there are many strategies that might work for fat loss in our 20s and 30s but we have other goals in midlife such as maintaining our strength, agility, brain and heart health as we age. This article will show you the basic principles that accomplish all these goals. As a bonus, it helps you think about using certain foods to better support hormone balance.
Nutrition Strategies That Will Fall Short During Perimenopause & Menopause
A quick Google of “what to eat for my hormones” will bring up a lot of strategies that might work really well before perimenopause and menopause but fall short because the midlife hormone landscape is simply delicate and ever shifting. Many of these strategies are too subtle to make much of a difference with erratic and ultimately dwindling hormone output and others are too aggressive in some ways for perimenopause. This article will save you time and effort by explaining how common “hormone balancing” strategies actually work and which ones come up short in midlife.
The Truth About Compounding Pharmacies
There are a lot of menopause experts that are very against the use of compounding pharmacies to make custom hormone replacement medicines for women during midlife. The concern is that these medications are unregulated – making it sound like these medicines are made in someone’s basement. The truth is compounding pharmacies fill an important role when women need a customized dosage or formulation that isn’t available from our local Walgreen’s and spoiler: compounding pharmacies are run by licensed pharmacists in FDA regulated facilities using FDA regulated ingredients. There is a place for these types of pharmacies and medications and this article will clear up any fear and confusion around this topic.
LIsten to the Dr Brooke Show episode #436
Should You Use Telehealth For HRT?
Many women frustrated at lack of local providers who are up to date on current HRT best practices are turning to telehealth for a virtual prescriber to get their hormone prescriptions. There are some real advantages to these platforms including convenient access to experts right from your couch but there are some downsides too. This article covers pros and cons and how to make the most of telehealth if it’s the right fit for you.
Should You Be Cycling Your HRT?
HRT can be thought of as a bit of art mixed with science in that the best providers help women create a regimen that helps them feel their best. One of the topics in HRT that has the least agreement is whether a woman should take the same dose of estrogen and progesterone throughout her cycle or throughout the month or should she vary it aiming for a rhythm that is similar to what our bodies would normally do during a 28 day monthly cycle. There are certainly advantages to this but it can feel tedious as well. This article explains the advantages of cyclical HRT and why it might be worth the hassle.
LIsten to the Dr Brooke Show episode #444
Should You Test Your Hormones During Perimenopause?
If you’ve suspected your hormones are shifting and leading to your current symptoms you likely have been given a couple of typical responses including: no, hormones vary too much so we don’t’ test them during perimenopause or certain tests are better than other during midlife. It is hard to make sense of what you see on the internet as it so often conflicts with what your doctor may have told you. There are a variety of options for testing and this article will help you make sense of how to utilize them to feel your best and reduce risks and side effects from HRT.
Why Your Progesterone:Estrogen Ratio Matters
Estrogen and progesterone have an intricate relationship that needs to be in balance whether you are cycling or taking HRT. Progesterone is the hormone of temperance, keeping estrogen in check and when it can’t, we see a host of symptoms. Utilizing testing to calculate the P:E2 (progesterone to estradiol or E2 ratio) can help you suss out exactly what the issue is so that you won’t assume it’s merely a case of needing to begin taking or increase your dose of progesterone, balance your estrogen dosage better or support the metabolism of estrogen.
Should You Use a Birth Control PIll Instead Of HRT for Perimenopause?
If you have expressed a concern about erratic periods, hot flashes or mood changes in midlife your doc may have suggested that you take a birth control pill. If you have asked your doctor to prescribe your HRT you may have been offered birth control pills instead. While birth control pills can temper the erratic hormone landscape of midlife – and certainly provide contraception – women deserve to know that these hormones are not the same as the hormones used as part of HRT nor do they provide the same benefits. This article explains the difference so you can make an informed choice.
LIsten to the Dr Brooke Show episode #451
Why Some Women Do Not Tolerate Progesterone
Progesterone generally makes women feel less anxious and sleep better. However, some women either do not feel much benefit and others feel mild to severe anxiety, irritability, insomnia or even panic from it. This can be part of the picture of PMDD (premenstrual dysphoric disorder, more on that here) or it can be an issue that arises when a woman starts HRT and feels worse rather than better. It’s tricky because if we want to utilize estrogen as part of our HRT, we need to figure out how to give a woman progesterone as well, be that via different delivery methods, lower dosages or other strategies. This podcast episode explains why progesterone isn’t tolerated by all women and what you can do about it.
How Progesterone + Estrogen Impact Your Sleep
Sleep issues are among the most common problems in midlife. Tossing and turning, waking frequently, often taking quite a while to go back to sleep if you do at all, or waking up 3-5AM with your body thinking it’s 6 or 7 and you are up for the day. Progesterone is the go to for sleep problems related to hormone decline, but low estrogen will shift your clock leading to early waking times and it boosts serotonin which is both relaxing and related to melatonin production. Both of these hormones are needed for adequate and restorative sleep and this episode will help you understand if it’s low progesterone or low estrogen – or both – that needs to be addressed.
What Women Need To Know About Using Testosterone as HRT
Testosterone is both overprescribed and totally ignored. While an important hormone it’s often given too soon or via delivery methods that cause extremely high levels of this hormone to build up for women. What’s more there is no FDA regulated product for women so prescribers need to compound it or give a male approved product and ask women just to use a small amount. Needless to say, testosterone creates quite a bit of confusion for women while on one hand it appears to be the answer to all their problems and on the other the side effects of acne, hair loss and irritability make some women nervous.
HRT Is A Piece of the Puzzle – Not The Whole Puzzle
There is so much about midlife that isn’t solved by starting HRT, making a change in dosage or dialing in the right testing or supplement regimen. It’s about facing what feels sad, overwhelming and all too real about this phase of life. Midlife can feel like a real reckoning and it’s important that we talk about this and not just how estrogen can relieve a hot flash or how progesterone can help you sleep. I cover my own personal journey in the first part of a two episode series and then my 3G +4R Process in part II. I also cover all this in a FREE downloadable guide as well.
Get the FREE guide Midlife Is More Than HRT
Listen to the Dr Brooke Show Midlife Is More Than HRT Part I and Part II