Archive for November, 2009

Dr.Greenbean store is finally open!

Sunday, November 29th, 2009

You can now purchase supplements in our online store. Check out the products and get going on the path to wellness in 2010!  Keep your self healthy this year and reep the benefits of energy, happiness, self esteem, and prevention.

We have some excellent cleanses and kits to help you start the new year out right! If you want to lose weight, check out our new HCG lozenges (the real drug…not a scam) and get started today!

If you have any problems with our online store, please email us or give us a call to help us FIX it.

Thanks,

Dr.GB

PREMPRO (premerin and provera) really does SUCK!

Saturday, November 21st, 2009
Pfizer Must Pay $6.3 Million in Damages Over Prempro (Update3)

By Sophia Pearson and Jef Feeley

Nov. 20 (Bloomberg) — Two Pfizer Inc. units’ hormone- replacement therapy drugs caused an Illinois woman’s breast cancer, making them liable for at least $6.3 million in damages, a Philadelphia jury ruled today.

Jurors deliberated about five hours before finding that the combination of Wyeth’s Prempro and Pharmacia & Upjohn’s Provera menopause drugs was a substantial contributing factor in Donna Kendall’s breast cancer. Kendall, 66, had a double mastectomy in 2002 after taking the hormone-replacement drugs for 11 years.

The panel will hear evidence Nov. 23 on whether Wyeth and Upjohn should pay punitive damages over their handling of the drugs. Wyeth has lost six of nine jury verdicts, including the last four in a row, over the drugs since 2006. This is Upjohn’s third loss at the jury stage. A trial judge threw out one verdict and another is on appeal.

“We’ve very pleased with the compensatory verdict and we look forward to the jury hearing the rest of the case,” Tobi Millrood, an attorney for Kendall, said after the verdict was read.

“We are obviously disappointed with the verdict and will evaluate all of our legal options once the court completes its work in this case,” Pfizer spokesman Chris Loder said in an e- mailed statement.

Menopause Symptoms

More than 6 million women have taken hormone-replacement medicines to treat menopause symptoms such as hot flashes, night sweats and mood swings. Until 1995, many patients combined Premarin, Wyeth’s estrogen-based drug, with progestin-laden Provera, made by Upjohn.

Wyeth, which hasn’t reserved funds to cover losses in the litigation, later combined the two hormones in Prempro. The drugs are still on the market. New York-based Pfizer completed its $68 billion purchase of Wyeth Oct. 15.

Annual sales of Wyeth’s hormone-replacement drugs topped $2 billion before the 2002 Women’s Health Initiative study, sponsored by the U.S. National Institutes of Health, suggested women using the medicines had a higher breast-cancer risk.

Today’s verdict is the largest compensatory damage award handed down in cases tried in Philadelphia so far, Millrood said. It follows a $3.7 million award last month to another Illinois woman who blamed her breast cancer on Prempro.

While jurors also awarded Connie Barton punitive damages in her case, that award was sealed while the Kendall case was being tried in the same courthouse. People familiar with the verdict told Bloomberg News Nov. 5 the award was about $75 million.

‘Squeal Point’

Pfizer’s losses in Prempro cases may have company officials considering a global settlement proposal to resolve them, said David Logan, dean of the Roger Williams University Law School.

“There is definitely a squeal point for companies in these kinds of product-liability cases where they start thinking about settling,” Logan, who teaches classes on mass-tort law, said in an interview.

“When the trend starts running clearly against companies in these cases, and they keep getting pounded by juries, the issue of settlement become a popular topic in the boardroom,” he added.

In Kendall’s case, jurors concluded Wyeth and Upjohn officials failed to adequately warn Kendall’s doctors about the drugs’ cancer risks and that failure played a role in the physicians’ decision to prescribe the drugs.

The panel also found Wyeth’s and Upjohn’s conduct in marketing and selling the drugs was hiding health risks was “wanton and reckless.” That makes the companies open to a punitive-damage award under Pennsylvania law.

‘Reckless Indifference’

“An adequate warning would have made a difference,” Millrood said during his closing statements yesterday. The companies “had a reckless indifference to women in this country and a reckless indifference to Donna Kendall.”

At least 34 Prempro cases have been set for trial so far, and 19 have been thrown out by judges or withdrawn by plaintiffs, according to Pfizer officials. Wyeth also has settled at least five cases over the drugs.

The case is Kendall v. Wyeth Pharmaceuticals Inc., 040600965, Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania.

Vitamin D and mood disorders in WOMEN

Friday, November 20th, 2009

clip_image002An association between vitamin D deficiency and many mood disorders has been suggested in several studies. These associations include major depressive disorder, seasonal affective disorder (SAD), premenstrual syndrome and other depressive disorders.

Peer-reviewed research studies were located in various data-bases searching for studies investigating vitamin D and depression, seasonal affective disorder, PMS, postpartum depression, perinatal depression, depressive disorder or mood disorder in women. Eleven studies were initially identified, but five were eliminated because they did not meet the inclusion criteria. Of these six studies, four reported significant results showing an association between low serum 25 (OH) D levels and symptoms of a mood disorder, SAD, major depressive disorder, or PMS. One study of major depression and one on SAD did not report an association. Only one of the four positive studies was a randomized controlled trial.

Vitamin D receptors are involved in the regulation of glucocorticoid signaling and dysfunctional glucocorticoid signaling and increased glucocorticoids have been implicated in major depressive disorder. Other biochemical mechanisms may also exist, associating vitamin D with mood disorders.

I look forward to more research on specific mood disorders in women and vitamin D levels.

References:

Murphy P, Wagner C. Vitamin D and mood disorders among women: an integrative review. J Midwifery Women’s Health 2008;53:440-446

Does soy interefere with thyroid function??

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

I recently had this question posed to me….this is the best article I found on the subject with links to further research.

Do Soy Foods Negatively Affect Your Thyroid?
A Look at the Downsides of Soy
by Mary Shomon

It seems that there’s isn’t a newspaper, magazine or news program that hasn’t recently featured a story on the amazing health benefits of soy food products and soy/isoflavone supplements. Soy is promoted as a healthy alternative to estrogen replacement for some women, as a possibly way to reduce the risk of breast cancer, as a way to minimize menopause symptoms, and as a healthier, low-fat protein alternative for meats and poultry. But what all the positive stories fail to mention is that there is a very real — but very overlooked — downside to the heavy or long-term use of soy products.

Soy products increase the risk of thyroid disease. And this danger is particularly great for infants on soy formula.

This is not information that the powerful and profitable U.S. soy industry wants you to know. The sale of soy products is big business, and the increasing demand for soy protein products, soy powders and soy isoflavone supplements is making that an even more profitable business than ever before.

In researching my book, Living Well With Hypothyroidism, which covers the issue of soy products and the thyroid in great depth, I talked to Dr. Mike Fitzpatrick, an environmental scientist and phytoestrogen researcher who has conducted in-depth studies on soy, particularly the use of soy formulas. Dr. Fitzpatrick makes it clear that soy products can have a detrminental affect on both adults and infants. In particular, he firmly believe that soy formula manufacturers should remove the isoflavones — that part of the soy products that act as anti-thyroid agents — from their products.

Researchers have identified that the isoflavones act as potent anti-thyroid agents, and are capable of suppressing thyroid function, and causing or worsening hypothyroidism. Soy is a phytoestrogen, and therefore acts in the body much like a hormone, so it’s no surprise that it interacts with the delicate balance of the thyroid’s hormonal systems. High consumption of soy products are also proven to cause goiter, (Anti-thyroid isoflavones from soybean: isolation, characterization, and mechanisms of action, Divi RL; Chang HC; Doerge DR, National Center for Toxicological Research, Jefferson, AR 72079, USA, Biochem Pharmacol, 1997 Nov, 54:10, 1087-96)

 

Note: The best source of information on soy and its negative impact on health can be found at the Soy Online Service, and in particular, its page on phytoestrogenic effects of soy, and impact on the thyroid.

Isoflavones belong to the flavonoid or bioflavonoid family of chemicals, and are considered endocrine disruptors — plants or other products that act as hormones, disrupting the endocrine system, and in some cases, this disruption involves acting as an anti-thyroid agent. (The grain millet, for example, contains high levels of flavonoids, and is commonly known as problematic for thyroid function). Flavonoids inhibit thyroid peroxidase (TPO), which disturbs proper thyroid function.The March 1999 issue of Natural Health magazine has a feature on soy that quotes Daniel R. Doerge, Ph.D., a researcher at the Food and Drug Aministration’s National Center for Toxicological Research. Dr. Doerge has researched soy’s anti-thyroid properties, and has said “…I see substantial risks from taking soy supplements or eating huge amounts of soyfoods for their putative disease preventive value. There is definitely potential for interaction with the thyroid.”

One UK study of premenopausal women gave 60 grams of soy protein per day for one month. This was found to disrupt the menstrual cycle, with the effects of the isoflavones continuing for a full three months after stopping the soy in the diet. Isoflavones are also known to modify fertility and change sex hormone status. Isoflavones have been shown to have serious health effects — including infertility, thyroid disease or liver disease — on a number of mammals.

Dr. Fitzpatrick believes that people with hypothyroidism should avoid soy products, because, “any inhibition of TPO will clearly work against anyone trying to correct an hypothyroid state.” In addition, he believes that the current promotion of soy as a health food will result in an increase in thyroid disorders.

The Dangers of Soy Formulas

Since the late 1950’s, it has been known that soy formulas contain anti-thyroid agents. Infants on soy formula are particularly vulnerable to developing autoimmune thyroid disease when exposed to high exposure of isoflavones over time. ( Breast and soy-formula feedings in early infancy and the prevalence of autoimmune thyroid disease in children. Fort P; Moses N; Fasano M; Goldberg T; Lifshitz F Department of Pediatrics, North Shore University Hospital-Cornell University Medical College, Manhasset, New York 11030. J Am Coll Nutr, 1990 Apr, 9:2, 164-7) This study found that the frequency of feedings with soy-based milk formulas in early life was noticeably higher in children with autoimmune thyroid disease, and thyroid problems were almost triple in those soy formula-fed children compared to their siblings and healthy unrelated children. Dr. Fitzpatrick even believes that long-term feeding with soy formulas inhibits TPO to such an extent that long-term elevated TSH levels can also raise the risk of thyroid cancer.

Not much is being done in the U.S. to make parents aware of the thyroid-related dangers of soy formulas, or to alert the public that heavy soy consumption may be a danger to thyroid function. Other countries, however, are far ahead of the U.S. In July of 1996, the British Department of Health issued a warning that the phytoestrogens found in soy-based infant formulas could adversely affect infant health. The warning was clear, indicating that soy formula should only be given to babies on the advice of a health professional. They advised that babies who cannot be breastfed or who have allergies to other formulas be given alternatives to soy-based formulas.

Why more information is not available about these concerns is probably a function of the tremendous strength of the large agricultural companies that dominate America’s soy market. One thing is clear, however. At the same time that health experts, and nearly every radio and television health program in the nation touts soy as the miracle health food of the new millenium, the United States pediatric and medical community needs to get more on top of this issue, and begin to counsel their patients regarding the serious impact use of soy products can have on thyroid function.

How Much Soy is Safe?

According to the Soy Online Service, for infants, any soy is too much. For adults, just 30 mg of soy isoflavones per day is the amount found to have a negative impact on thyroid function. This amount of soy isoflavones is found in just 5-8 ounces of soy milk, or 1.5 ounces of miso. For more information on how much soy is too much, see the Soy Online Service guidance page.

The USDA has launched a website that is promoting the health benefits of use of soy and soy foods. The USDA site lists the isoflavone content of a total of 128 foods, including foods such as vegetarian hot dogs soybeans, chickpeas and tofu. This can help you in deciding how much soy to include in your diet.

biodentical hormones–the other side of the story

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

 the other side of the story on bioidenticals (this article was in WIB’s newsletter this month)

The healines read, “Experts Urge Caution with Bioidenticals – Millions have tried custom hormones.

What the article didn’t say is more telling!  Millions of women are being helped by natural bioidentical hormones, whether customized prescription or Rx  manufactured prescription.  So we’d like to walk through the media talking points and share our perspective:

Bioidentical is a marketing term that has no medical meaning. 

This is curious, as one of the pharmaceutical companies, Solvay, uses this term on its website to discuss its bioidentical progesterone capsules, Prometrium®.  The term was coined to differentiate hormones that are the same molecular structure as your own endogenous or body-producing hormones versus hormones that have an additional analog, making the molecule different than what your body produces.  In fact, many physicians were confusing synthetic progestin with progesterone, and a way to differentiate was necessary.  This has really become more of a divisive phrase for the FDA and pharmaceutical companies to differentiate between Rx (manufactured) drugs and prescription compounded drugs, even though bioidenticals are contained in prescription manufactured drugs like Prometrium® oral progesterone and EstroGel® transdermal estrogen.  So the bottom line is that bioidentical simply means a chemical match for the human body, and it comes in both manufactured (Rx) and compounded prescription forms.

Custom compounded hormones are not approved by the Federal Food and Drug Administration and have not been proven safe and effective. 

Compounded prescriptions are formulated based on a physician’s written prescription and instruction.  Compounding pharmacies can only use ingredients which have been sanctioned by the United States Pharmacopeia because they are safe for use as prescribed.  Compounding pharmacies are governed by the State Board of Pharmacy and are authorized by the Federal Food and Drug Administration.  This is how medicine was originally dispensed long before pharmaceutical manufacturing came along.  To help illustrate this, estriol is listed in the United States Pharmacopeia and is not currently manufactured for use by any pharmaceutical company in the U.S.  This form of estrogen has been used successfully in Europe and Asia for decades and is approved in those countries.  So the only way to get this compound is through a compounding pharmacy, which is exactly the reason why the FDA has sanctioned compounding pharmacies.  Compounding is typically chosen when a dose or specific route of administration is needed that is not available in Rx manufactured form.

Hormone preparations do not need to be customized for each woman:  A few standard doses work for almost everyone, medical experts say.  The saliva tests that some women are given to tailor formulas are of dubious value because hormone levels fluctuate widely throughout the day.

Medical experts have not heard the outcry of millions of women who are suffering on combinations which are not relieving their symptoms.  It’s time that women have the option of individualized medicine based on their unique biology.  For fifty years, physicians did not test hormones levels to monitor their patients on conventional HRT.  Now we have innovative ways to measure hormones in the blood, saliva and urine.  Each of these diagnostics provides different kinds of information.  Read our article on hormone testing.  If a provider is not familiar with how to use these tools, he or she would be inclined to disregard their benefit.  We are in a pioneering phase of women’s hormone health and gathering more information and data points in the best interest of women when trying to establish their needs.
 
Many compounders use estriol, a form of estrogen not approved for sale in the United States. 

The FDA took action on the use of estriol in January of 2008, stating that compounding pharmacies cannot include estriol, a main ingredient in many compounded hormone prescriptions, since the FDA has not approved any commercial drugs containing estriol.  Yet estriol is a very mild estrogen.  It is one of the three estrogens natural to a woman’s body, and the main estrogen during a pregnancy – the fetus is bathed in it.  Estriol is primarily used in cream form for vaginal dryness and urinary problems for women in perimenopause and menopause. The FDA recognizes that individually compounded medications should be available to patients (by prescription) for “those drugs for which no FDA approved option exists.”  There are no FDA approved drugs containing estriol, so it is a perfect example of where a compounded prescription would be needed in select cases.

The FDA claims that there is no safety and patient response data for estriol.  In fact, there is a body of literature about this which can be accessed in the Research section on the Women in Balance website: Bioidentical hormone research.  In fact, estriol has been used in Europe and Japan for years with no reported ill effects. Like many commonly prescribed drugs, estriol has a monograph from the U.S. Pharmacopeia (USP), the ingredient compendium that sets the national standards for compounding medicines.

Women need to understand there’s no rigorous evidence these preparations are any more effective or any safer than traditional hormone therapy.

The FDA must protect the public from fraudulent and misleading claims with potentially dangerous drugs and foods, and pharmacies and pharmaceutical companies making unwarranted claims of safety and efficacy should indeed be sanctioned.  WIB completely supports safety when it comes to women’s health choices!

However, women have a right to choose their treatment when multiple options exist, and practitioners have a right to prescribe drugs to benefit each individual patient.  In the absence of observed and documented danger of a compounded prescription, the FDA should not interfere in the doctor-patient-pharmacist relationship.  There is a body of scientific literature that supports individualized treatment, and WIB consistently calls for new research with respect to bioidenticals.

At WIB( and drgreenbean.com) , we believe women have a right to accurate, unbiased information and resources to help them through the often tumultuous transition at menopause.   We encourage you to educate yourself and ask questions before using any medications or preparations.  Our goal is to empower you to take charge of your health.

Difficulties of being a DOCTOR who gives a RIP.

Saturday, November 14th, 2009

OK…DR.Greenbean is on her soap box again.

I went into medicine to “help people” as I bet 99% of all new med school students do. I decided to really help people you have to listen to them, really hear them and their story. I became a naturopathic physician because naturopaths are trained to do this “listening” the best. I am very science-driven and don’t do anything to weird so I guess I am a green-allopath of sorts but one thing I do with every patient is give them the time to share their story and I listen. (my office visits are 45-90 minutes long)

I get very attached to my patients. We form friendships and a tight bond. That being said, my heart and soul are sometimes tested. When a patient ends up with a cancer, illness, or even a personal problem it causes my heart to ache and sometimes to second guess what I have done with them as a doctor. I try my best to prevent disease and illness in everyone I see but sometimes the path is already laid or genetics are a bitch.

I do a weight loss program (hcg diet) at my office that the general public can do without being a “patient” of mine. All they want is the quick weight loss solution and they couldn’t careless about prevention and health (not EVERYONE is like this). I am finding I can’t stand that!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!  I have managed to gain several FABULOUS patients who have done the hcg program and want to continue the journey to good health.

I guess what I am trying to say is that for a doc like myself to enjoy what they do and feel adequate we need good relationships with our patients. Our patients must WANT to heal and be healthy.  Getting to know my patients, their stories, their families, their dogs, their sex life etc…is the BEST part of my job. I care about YOU…please remember I am being the best DOCTOR I know how to be and that I still am an emotional bitch too!

rgds

Dr.GB

Estrogen dominance–TOO much is NOT a good thing

Saturday, November 14th, 2009

I recently have seen a bunch of estrogen dominant gals…that means high estrogen levels in their blood. Some of them are pre-menopausal and some are post-menopausal. The post-meno gals are usually on estrogen…too much of it. Did you know the symptoms of estrogen excess are almost the same as those from estrogen deficiency??????  It is not healthy nor safe for your body to have TOO much estrogen. Get tested if you have any concerns.

I copied this good article from womentowomen.com…hope you find it enlightening.

The truth about estrogen dominance as related to
pre-menopause and menopause

While we all owe a huge debt of gratitude to Dr. Lee for his groundbreaking work on the importance of progesterone in relation to estrogen, to my mind the concept of estrogen dominance is too simplistic, as is the concept of progesterone supplementation.

Since Dr. Lee’s death in October 2003, we have witnessed huge leaps in our biochemical understanding. If he were still with us, I’m sure he would feel vindicated to learn that the latest research indicates many women actually do have normal levels of circulating progesterone. Just as Dr. Lee himself noted, what often throws the balance off is an excess of estrogen, caused by environmental, dietary, and lifestyle factors.

What this all means is that the theory of estrogen dominance is very real, but its significance lies in the overall ratio of estrogen to progesterone — and this ratio is an individualized and dynamic one. Of all women experiencing symptoms of estrogen dominance, some with low levels of progesterone may do very well with progesterone supplementation, whereas others with normal progesterone levels may be better off focusing on changes that can normalize their estrogen or testosterone levels. How do you know where you fit in? The only way to really tell is to have your hormone levels checked and take action from there.

It is true that estrogen is often too high relative to progesterone. Most of us who have had PMS are familiar with this temporary form of excess estrogen. You can see by the chart above how progesterone levels gradually fall during the course of a regular menstrual cycle. In some women this drop may be more precipitous and cause symptoms of PMS.

During pre-menopause it’s common for estrogen levels to decrease slowly while progesterone levels plummet — a natural result of fewer ovulations, fewer burst follicles and less progesterone. This can cause many of our worst symptoms. (See our articles on menstrual cycles to learn more.)

Calling this state “estrogen dominance” is catchy but misleading. It implies there is one problem, which isn’t true; and not all women experience the condition anyway. And it implies there is one solution, which also isn’t true. Most of the tens of thousands of women we have treated for pre-menopause symptoms have suffered not from simple estrogen dominance but from a more fundamental disruption of the body’s ability to maintain hormonal balance. There are usually multiple causes, including stress, emotional factors, and the estrogen-like chemicals in our environment called xenoestrogens.

The truth is, healthy hormonal balance is complicated. It isn’t just a matter of not enough progesterone. That’s a little like arguing that menopause is caused by not enough estrogen. As you can see from the chart below showing how hormones are made in your body, there are lots of players out on the dance floor at any given time.

There’s no simple test for estrogen dominance. But if you have severe symptoms of PMS, pre-menopause or menopause that don’t respond to a program of increased support for your body within a month or two, you may have persistently higher than normal levels of estrogen. Let’s talk about why it’s important to pay attention to these symptoms.

What are the health consequences of estrogen dominance?

Another of Dr. Lee’s contributions was to raise women’s awareness of the profound connections between hormonal imbalance and health.

When estrogen levels are high in relation to our progesterone we experience many severe symptoms, among them anxiety, breast tenderness, cyclical headaches or migraines, irregular bleeding, water retention, weight gain and more. (Note that a number of these symptoms are also indicative of the exact opposite condition — a deficiency of estrogen — another example of why the concept of estrogen dominance is too simplistic.)

If estrogen levels stay unopposed, women may develop infertility, endometriosis, amenorrhea (skipped periods), hypermenorrhea (heavy bleeding), fibroids, uterine cancer, heart disease and stroke, and decreased cognitive ability, among other conditions.

And while we share many of the precepts set forth by Dr. Lee, we are less inclined to think of estrogen, even high levels of estrogen, as universally harmful. We believe every woman is unique, and what may cause harm in one may be fine for another. There have been studies and speculation for example about the connection between high levels of estrogen and breast cancer.

Estrogen has many wonderful qualities. It creates our fertility, protects our health in myriad ways, and serves as a powerful anti-inflammatory. But we are very concerned about environmental estrogens. They’re another story entirely.

Awash in a sea of xenoestrogens

For the most part, our bodies are amazingly resilient. We are hard-wired to resist threats to our equilibrium. What our bodies are not designed for is exposure to the many endocrine disruptors in our environment, among them the family of chemicals known as xenoestrogens.

Many of these xenoestrogens are proven carcinogens. They are also well known for their ability to damage the immune system and interrupt hormonal balance. Our cells can’t always distinguish fully between our own estrogen and xenoestrogens. Every cell has estrogen receptors that recognize and open to the shape of an estrogen molecular chain, regardless of where it comes from.

Pesticides are perhaps the biggest source of xenoestrogens. Most bioaccumulate, meaning they are stored in fat cells of fish, poultry and other food sources in increasing concentration until they reach the top of the food chain — where you and I consume them! They are highly estrogenic, and some experts estimate that the average American ingests over a pound of pesticides a year.

A second major source of xenoestrogens is the many growth hormones given to livestock and poultry, most of which contain fat-soluble estrogens. When we consume those animals or their milk, we ingest that estrogen. Organochlorides like dioxin (a by-product of chlorine when it is burned or processed), PCB’s, PVC’s, and some plasticizers are just a few of the many manmade chemicals that act like estrogen in our bodies. Many others have the effect of interrupting our normal endocrine function, hence the term “endocrine disruptors.”

Mainstream medicine is finally paying attention because xenoestrogens not only affect the cells of women, but those of men and children. Sperm counts have dropped by 50% in some studies, a significant factor in the epidemic of infertility. The age at which girls develop secondary sex characteristics (breasts and pubic hair) is also dropping. It is not exactly clear what role endocrine disruptors as a whole have in the steady rise of chronic diseases in children (at earlier ages!), but studies are underway to evaluate this.

It is easy to see why Dr. Lee’s advice to support our bodies with extra progesterone makes some sense. Let’s examine the role progesterone plays in our bodies and how it can help in hormonal balance.

The role of progesterone and estrogen levels in women

Progesterone is the building block for many other major hormones. Cortisol, testosterone and estrogen are all made from progesterone in a process that begins with cholesterol. Take a look at the chart below of the metabolic pathway.

These hormones are present in our bodies to varying degrees at all times, but only progesterone is readily converted into its sister hormones if needed. Importantly, if we are under a lot of stress and our adrenals are pumping out cortisol, our bodies will take any available progesterone and divert it to meet that demand. If too much progesterone gets diverted for cortisol, as happens when you suffer from adrenal fatigue, there is not enough to make the testosterone needed for a woman’s sexual response — let alone to oppose rising levels of estrogen. No wonder we feel sick, lethargic, and uninterested in sex when we’re under stress!

Insufficient progesterone is hard on our health in other ways because, in addition to reproductive function, all women need normal levels of progesterone to spur new bone growth (and ward off osteoporosis), convert fat into energy, metabolize glucose, and perform many other vital cell functions.

But it’s equally obvious that just adding progesterone isn’t the answer. If stress is creating your hormonal imbalance, adding progesterone will just treat the symptom, not the cause. Because it’s a “moving target,” hormonal balance is never a matter of taking a magic pill. Let’s talk about how to find a solution that works for you.

A woman’s unique path to hormonal balance

In looking at the illustration of the metabolic pathways of progesterone, it’s helpful to think of your endocrine system as a kind of orchestra, and hormonal balance as its music. Each of us has a unique body and biography, so each of us has a unique orchestra and a unique symphony. We all make different demands on our bodies; we all need different kinds of support. Adding any one element to the exclusion of others may make you feel worse, not better. For instance, many women convert progesterone immediately into estrogen; for them, a progesterone supplement will only worsen their imbalance.

There are many women whose bodies, either naturally or due to external factors, produce an abundance of estrogen. I call these patients highly estrogenic, and they are more susceptible to experiencing severe symptoms. They also feel the most dramatic improvement when they add progesterone to their routine.

While genetics have some influence, lifestyle is the single biggest factor in the production and storage of estrogen, progesterone, testosterone, and our other hormones. Our modern diet, filled with refined flour and sugar, simple carbohydrates and artificial ingredients, combined with our lack of exercise, promotes metabolic irregularities that lead to insulin resistance, obesity, digestive problems, and cardiovascular disease, which in turn affect the healthy flow of hormone production shown in the chart above.

Stress plays a major role in estrogen overproduction by triggering an elevated level of cortisol, which interrupts the feedback loop between the brain, pituitary, and the ovaries that regulates hormones. I’m sure most of you have had the experience of skipping a period or two when you are under stress. At the practice we have learned that most women don’t understand that unhappiness is a form of stress. To make the point, I sometimes actually write a patient a prescription that says “Play!”

Limiting our exposure to xenoestrogens is also very important. Thoroughly wash or peel all produce to remove at least some of the pesticides. Eating only lean, organic meat and dairy products is wise. Heat food in metal or porcelain containers, not plastic, and definitely not in the microwave with plastic wrap! Drinking out of glass containers instead of plastic, previously used water bottles, or Styrofoam cups is also a good choice.

A diet rich in phytonutrients is also thought to be protective. Phytoestrogens, for example, are natural, plant-based substances found in soybeans, licorice, yams, alfalfa and lots of other foods that are thought to bind to estrogen cell receptors and protect them from accepting the more damaging xenoestrogens. In addition to eating a plant-rich diet, I recommend taking a high-quality daily nutritional supplement as a very important step towards restoring hormonal balance naturally. Because they work as molecular messengers, abundant botanical and other micronutrients such as essential fatty acids can help increase your body’s ability to listen and dance to the hormonal music.

Phytotherapy —gentle approach to a complex issue

If you truly are progesterone deficient, then additional progesterone may be a good solution for you, particularly when used as part of a comprehensive plan that includes healthy lifestyle and dietary support. We’ve seen women respond extremely well to over-the-counter progesterone cream formulations for just weeks or months; others need higher prescription-strength doses over longer time periods. (A comprehensive blood panel or saliva test will help show whether or not you have a serious hormone deficiency that warrants prescription-strength hormone replacement.)

If you are like most of the women I see, your hormonal picture is much more complex than a simple estrogen or progesterone deficiency. If you are experiencing moderate to severe, persistent symptoms of hormonal imbalance, or weaning yourself off HRT, you can probably benefit from an approach that incorporates phytotherapy aimed at normalizing the healthy dynamic interplay between all three of your key sex hormones: progesterone, estrogen and testosterone. Herbal therapies like black cohosh, Ashwagandha, chasteberry and others are a gentle, natural way to restore your hormone functions as your body requires. Ancient cultures used these botanical remedies to support, enhance or substitute hormones in an adaptogenic manner, as the body required.

So, if you’ve tried some over-the-counter progesterone products and been disappointed, you may benefit from a more comprehensive approach that combines nutritional and lifestyle modifications with a gentle, but well-balanced botanical formulation and prescriptive strength progesterone cream. 

WHAT TO DO?

Like Dr. Lee, we think progesterone supplementation can be an important step towards rejuvenating hormonal balance, but we don’t recommend taking a one-hormone approach. And if your symptoms are ongoing, we encourage you to have your hormone levels monitored on a regular basis. Our belief is that the gentlest interventions in the hormonal choreography are the ones that restore balance best.

Remember, progesterone can’t restore hormonal balance alone!

I hope it’s helpful for you to read up on how our bodies really seek hormonal balance, and what each of us can do to find a solution that works for us. Viewing our symptoms as simply a sign of estrogen dominance is as misleading as attributing them to estrogen deficiency alone. And a combination approach works better than any kind of magic pill. Improving our nutrition, adding a robust nutritional supplement, reducing stress, minimizing xenoestrogens, and tapping the adaptogenic power of herbal medicine are all key measures. Together they will help support the demands on our bodies and restore the vitality and good health that come from natural hormonal balance.

* Adapted from information at McGill University and the University of Wisconsin

HCG is ready to ROLL!

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

Everyone…..our HCG is finally ready for you to purchase online! You have to fill out the medical info form and send back to us at the clinic. Our hcg consultant will then do a quick phone consult with you (it is a prescriptive item so we have to do this)….then you are ready to go.

DON”T BE AFRAID TO SUCCEED! Only your waistline is suffering……………

Dr.GB