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ABOUT ‘NATURAL’ PROGESTERONE
In 1966 Dr Robert Wilson, a New York gynecologist, wrote a book called Feminine Forever extolling the virtues of oestrogen replacement for women at the menopause. By taking it for the rest of our lives, he declared, we could partake forever of the ‘fountain of youth’ as he described it. Dr Wilson, a charming man, whom I once met, was certainly sincere enough in his desire to help women who experienced difficulties at the menopause. But it was his theories, expounded in this best-selling book that created the concept of the menopause as a deficiency disease, an illness which could have dire consequences if left untreated. ‘Women will be emancipated only when the shackles of hormonal deprivation are loosened,’ burbled the foreword written by another eminent doctor. The message was that we ignored the prospect of oestrogen replacement at our peril. It had a huge impact on popular health thinking at the time. Dr Wilson got quite carried away by it all, claiming there was ample evidence that the whole course of history has been changed not only by the presence of oestrogen but by its absence. Unstable oestrogen-starved women, he postulated, were a misery to themselves and everyone else, causing, at the extreme, alcoholism, drug addiction, divorce and broken homes. As you can imagine this changed the thinking of many women and doctors for decades. Oestrogen replacement became part of mainstream medicine, the great saviour. Then disaster struck.
Twenty years on doctors found that cases of endometrial cancer had risen greatly (to between four and eight times higher than that in non-hormone users) among the early generation of oestrogen takers. Progestogens were then added to help balance out the side effects of the oestrogen so that oestrogen replacement therapy’ became ‘hormone replacement therapy’ and most women were required to take both the hormones. Everyone became a little more cautious about hailing oestrogen as the best thing since sliced bread.
All this happened decades ago. But we are now today seeing a similar pattern developing over another hormone, progesterone – or natural progesterone as its growing number of fans prefers to describe it. Enter the new hyped-up wonder hormone, now hailed as the real and ‘natural’ hormone replacement. Is history merely repeating itself Arc we now going through another phase where everyone is jumping on the bandwagon by promoting progesterone as safe and effective before the true picture has been established
According to its supporters progesterone can help bone density and ‘cure’ an amazing selection of menopausal symptoms. Here is a list of some of them:
anxiety, lack of sex drive,
black circles under the eyes, lethargy,
blurred vision, low blood sugar,
breast pain and problems, migraines,
cold hands and feet, mood swings,
constipation, muscle and joint pains,
cyclic acne, panic attacks,
depression, poor concentration,
disturbances in appetite, poor digestion,
dry skin, sciatica,
exhaustion, spontaneous abortion,
fibroids, spontaneous bruising,
infertility, stiffness,
insomnia, thinning hair,
irritability, water retention
*18/101/5*

October 15, 2009 Post Under Women's Health - Read More

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