MENOPAUSE

Before using progesterone cream for the first time, please
read the pages on 
Estrogen DominanceVitamin D3 and Magnesium

Below is a list of menopause symptoms:

  • abdominal bloating
  • agoraphobia
  • aggression, anger, rage, resentment
  • alcoholism, particularly pre-menstrually
  • allergies
  • anxiety, nervousness, irrational fear
  • arthritis, joint and muscle pains
  • blood clots
  • breast tenderness
  • bruising and capillary breakage
  • chronic fatigue – muscular weakness, procrastination, exhaustion, tiredness, mental confusion
  • difficulty in getting up after enough sleep, lethargy
  • clumsiness
  • cold hands and feet
  • constipation
  • cracked heels
  • cravings, eating disorders, binges, inability to tolerate long intervals without food
  • cysts – breast and ovarian
  • dizziness
  • depression- loneliness, uselessness, endless crying, irrational behaviour
  • fibroids
  • guilt
  • hair loss and excessive facial hair
  • headache
  • hot flushes and night sweats
  • hypoglycaemia (low blood sugar)
  • hypothyroidism
  • incontinence
  • insomnia
  • irregular menstrual flow, heavy or light flow
  • irritability
  • lack of self confidence and esteem
  • libido loss
  • memory loss
  • mood swings and irritability
  • nails – flaking, brittle and weak
  • osteoporosis
  • palpitations
  • panic attacks
  • personality changes
  • skin problems - dry and early ageing
  • sleep disturbances
  • tension
  • urinary tract infections, cystitis
  • vaginal thinning, dryness and itching
  • violence-verbal and physical
  • violent dreams
  • weight gain
  • water retention

Strictly speaking, symptoms only occur when periods have finally stopped. It is generally recommended to allow a year to pass before drawing to this conclusion.

These symptoms, which can be experienced in the years before the onset of menopause (sometimes referred to as peri-menopause), are generally far worse than those following after. In some women symptoms can start ten years before, sometimes they can persist from 5 to 10 years after.

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The causes of menopause:

Natural causes

Menopause normally occurs at an average age of fifty-one. Some women can reach their early sixties, whilst the youngest on record is nineteen. Smoking can reduce the age it begins by two years. An early puberty usually means a late menopause, but many factors can influence it’s start.

Women are born with different numbers of eggs, all fully developed whilst she is still a foetus, peaking at several million. The current theory as to what causes menopause is that as a woman ages, the number of eggs decline and the ovaries shrink. At menopause, there are only about 1,000 left. But it is still only a theory, no one knows for sure.

At puberty the child starts developing into a woman. This is controlled by the affect of the two sex hormones estrogen and testosterone. Estrogen causes the breasts to grow and fat to be deposited, especially on the hips and thighs. Too much can cause a child to have very large breasts and fats deposits, causing the well known ‘puppy fat’. One of the main reasons for puppy fat is a lack of progesterone, which opposes the action of estrogen, but not until ovulation occurs is this produced. Once ovulation starts the puppy fat generally goes. Testosterone increases libido, deepens the voice and causes body hair to grow. But too much can cause aggression, acne, large quantities of body hair and contribute to poly-cystic ovaries. Women produce about 80% less testosterone than men.

About two years after the onset of puberty menstruation begins. The cycle is governed by four hormones. Initially follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) stimulates the egg, and the follicle surrounding it, to grow and the ovary to make estrogen. Estrogen is the dominant hormone in the first half of the cycle, stimulating the build-up of tissue and blood in the uterus.

At mid cycle the pituitary gland produces luteinising hormone which stimulates the follicle to rupture, releasing the egg, which slowly makes it’s way down the fallopian tube. The ruptured follicle, now called the corpus luteum, starts producing progesterone, the dominant hormone in the second half. Progesterone readies the endometrium (the uterine lining) for pregnancy. If the egg is fertilized it embeds itself in the lining and pregnancy ensues. If not, then the levels of both estrogen and progesterone drop sharply causing the lining to be shed.

This cycle continues until about ten years before menopause, when anovulatory (no ovulation) cycles begin. This is when the significance of the relationship between progesterone and menopause becomes apparent. When the anovulatory cycle happens no progesterone is produced during that month, but estrogen is still being made, leading to symptoms of estrogen dominance. Please refer to the above list for possible symptoms. As menopause approaches, anovulatory cycles increase, which in turn increases the amount and severity of the symptoms. By menopause the progesterone level can be as low as those in a man, but estrogen levels only drop when it finally arrives. Despite this women are often told the adverse symptoms which they've been experiencing are due to a drop in the estrogen level!

The link with progesterone is highlighted by the fact that women in industrialized countries have a hard time compared to women in rural societies. Dr. P. Ellison of Harvard University has studied estrogen levels in various ecological and cultural populations and has found that estrogen levels in western women are abnormally high. This can be due to a number of factors:

  • the food we consume (particularly animals fed estrogen to fatten them)
  • the crops sprayed with pesticides (most of which are estrogenic)
  • the Pill and HRT
  • drinking recycled water which has not had the estrogen removed
  • using cosmetics which are made with liquid paraffin and estrogenic antioxidants

Many women are under great stress during peri-menopause having to juggle work and home, often a teenage daughter is going through puberty at the same time, children leaving home, a bad marriage, job difficulties and maybe elderly parents now need looking after.

An understanding of the effects of a lack of progesterone is key to understanding that progesterone can play an enormously beneficial role in helping to go through menopause without too many adverse effects. By naturally opposing the action of estrogen, the symptoms of estrogen dominance are lessened and in some cases eliminated. The easiest method to apply progesterone is in a cream form.

New research conducted by Wallace and Kelsey and published in "Human Reproduction'', indicates that it might be possible, using ultrascan on the ovaries, to show the approach of menopause. Currently blood hormone levels are used to try to determine this, but these are notoriously inaccurate as it is common practice to only check estrogen levels, NOT progesterone. The patient generally needs to specifically request this despite the fact that progesterone and menopause are inextricably connected. As the symptoms of menopause are caused by a lack of progesterone and too much estrogen, the standard "estrogen only" test is of little help.

Chemical causes 

Menopause can be precipitated at any time in a woman’s life by chemotherapy used in cancer treatments. The symptoms are the same as in natural menopause. Tamoxifen, the chemical used to control breast cancer, can cause severe hot flushes. Progesterone can be safely used to combat them.

Hysterectomy

By removal of the uterus and possibly the ovaries, a woman is in instant menopause. If the ovaries are not removed at the same time as the uterus, they will generally atrophy within two to three years. In the recent past, following a hysterectomy, women were usually given HRT. However, with the publication of studies finalized in 2004, which proved beyond doubt that HRT can cause an increase in cancer (particularly breast cancer), stroke and heart disease, this practice has declined. Unfortunately few medical practitioners recommend progesterone regardless of the clear connection between progesterone and menopause.

Causes of Premature menopause

For reasons not too clear some women can go into premature menopause. One possible theory is the effect xeno-estrogens (xeno means foreign) have on the developing foetus. Xeno-estrogens mimic natural estrogen, but are extremely potent and highly toxic. Early exposure to estrogen or the xeno-estrogens can cause the follicles to mature rapidly and die off leaving few eggs in the ovary to reach puberty. This in turn leads to early menopause. Please visit the recommended web sites below for more on xeno-estrogens.

Turners’ syndrome (TS)

Mention must be made of the 1:2000 girl babies born with TS. Again for reasons unclear, these children are born with an X chromosome either missing entirely or partially missing. Apart from many potential problems, they have non-functioning ovaries, which means no estrogen will ever be produced. So as the child approaches puberty, the lack of secondary sexual characteristics becomes apparent, no breast, thighs etc. develop. She is then given supplemental estrogen to correct this, but no progesterone to balance the estrogen. Unfortunately, under the misguided belief that estrogen prevents osteoporosis, she is often given HRT. As TS was first reported as recently as the 1930's, it is possible that environmental poisons are to blame.

Depending on symptoms, use 200mg/6ml per day, more may be needed. NEVER use less than 100mg/3ml per day, but menopausal women usually need 200mg/6ml per day once progesterone has become the dominant hormone!

"Vitamin D3 - I can't stress enough it's importance! Please have your vitamin D3 level tested and visit the vitamin D3 page for more information. Amongst so many other health issues, it helps with depression, insomnia, MS, cancer, infertility - the list is endless.

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