Recognize the Symptoms of Andropause to Find Relief

Warning Signs of Andropause... and What to Do About It

Did you know that as people age, their hormone levels inevitably start to decline? And that this decline can lead to a whole host of uncomfortable symptoms in both men and women? In women, this decline starts to happen in the years leading up to menopause. For men, their testosterone levels start to decline as they approach middle age. And when this drop comes with symptoms like feeling sluggish, low libido, erectile dysfunction, a decreased ability to build muscle, weight gain, and mood swings, among others, it is known as andropause. It would seem like andropause should be unavoidable and a fact of life, like menopause. But many men don’t experience andropause or get by with minimal symptoms. A big key to reducing the symptoms of andropause is lifestyle—eating right and working out can help prevent andropause. And healthy habits can also help improve treatments for andropause, including bioidentical hormone replacement therapy. Read more…

The Problem With Heartburn Medications

Acid Reflux Symptoms? We’ve Got Solutions...

You’ve probably experienced some form of heartburn at one point or another in your lifetime. When it happens, it’s easy to associate it with something you ate or drank, but stress, hormones, and different health conditions can also make you more prone to heartburn. Heartburn is a very uncomfortable feeling in the chest—a burning sensation that often hits during the middle of the night. If this happens to you a few times a week, you may be suffering from acid reflux or GERD (gastroesophageal reflux disease). Acid reflux can hit people of all ages and sometimes with no explanation at all. Often though, living a healthy lifestyle—eating right, exercising, and avoiding the foods that can trigger these symptoms—can help, sometimes much more than over-the-counter treatments such as Tums or Zantac. The problem with taking medications for acid reflux in the long term is that these medications mask the real cause of acid reflux and may eventually worsen health problems. Read more…

Are Your Food Choices Keeping You Up at Night?

Poor Sleep Makes You Reach for Fattening Pick-Me-Ups

Sleep deprivation wreaks a lot more havoc on your body than just making you cranky and groggy when your alarm goes off. Not getting enough sleep on a regular basis can also affect your hormone balance as well as your ability to maintain a healthy weight. Studies have found that not sleeping enough can cause you to gain weight as well as make it harder to lose weight. In fact, adequate sleep may be just as important for weight loss and maintaining a healthy weight as hitting the gym. For one, if you’re up too late, or if you toss and turn all night, recent studies have shown that you are more likely to crave unhealthy foods. If lack of sleep only happens on occasion, it’s probably fine. But if you’re like many Americans, then this scenario happens all too often…so how do you stop the cycle? Read more…

Finding Real Relief From Headaches

Hormones Can Be a Headache... Literally!

We have all been there…you wake up in the morning with one eye still shut because the lights are too bright to face. Your head is pounding, it hurts to move, and you feel nauseated. While your first instinct may be to reach for the bottle of Excedrin, if this is a common experience for you, you may want to try a new approach—one that offers long-lasting relief. Making a few simple changes to your lifestyle, along with taking steps to get your hormones in balance, could make all the difference. While both men and women experience hormone-related headaches, women tend to suffer from these painful nuisances more often due to ever-fluctuating hormone levels. Low or fluctuating levels of estrogen or testosterone, and in some cases a combination of both, could be the culprit behind your throbbing headache. And finding relief might be easier than you realize. Read more…

Reset Your Health With a Hormone-Happy Diet

Balance Your Hormones with a Customized Diet

If you’re overweight, chances are you’ve tried exercise and all the latest diet plans. But if nothing has worked to really keep the pounds off, it can be hard to keep up the fight. Instead of giving up, it may just be time to take a different approach—one that takes into account the health of your hormones. Hormones are chemical messengers that relay messages from your brain to the rest of your body. They are responsible in some way for all of your bodily functions, including your metabolism, immune system, and more. Both thyroid and insulin imbalances can contribute to weight gain, but other hormonal imbalances can also be responsible for throwing off your weight loss efforts. For example, the hormone leptin is responsible for controlling your appetite and helping to make you feel full. When this hormone is not working as it should, your body doesn’t know to stop eating, and you may end up consuming more than you actually need. It is possible to stop the cycle, you just need to know how. Read more…

Health, Happiness, and Menopause

Hot Flashes—How Many Years Do They Last?

We all know that being in good health plays a large role in living a long, healthy, happy life. But there is so much more to it than that. Yes, being in good health can help with longevity, but it can also help ease the symptoms that accompany most women throughout the course of menopause. Hot flashes are one of the most notorious and uncomfortable symptoms that women endure during this time. They creep up out of nowhere, and all of a sudden you feel your temperature skyrocket and your skin get clammy. Some women experience hot flashes for years, while others never seem to have a problem with them. The severity of your hot flashes could be related to your current health status, according to researchers. And there are several tools you can use to battle your symptoms in the easiest way possible. Read more…

Hot Flashes— How Many Years Do They Last?

Duration of Menopause Symptoms Varies From Woman to Woman

Most women are familiar with one of the major symptoms of menopause, hot flashes, in which normal body temperature rises and an intense feeling of heat suddenly flushes over the body. Hot flashes are usually accompanied by a red, flushed face and heavy sweating. Hot flashes at night are common and can include night sweats. However, many women are not aware that there are varied types of hot flashes, and that they may even last beyond menopause!

New research from the Study of Women’s Health Across the Nation, or SWAN, found that there are four types of hot flash categories classified with menopause symptoms, each with varied timing and duration. Of course, hot flashes vary greatly from woman to woman, but since awareness is key to treatment, recognizing and understanding each type can greatly help reduce the discomfort associated with hot flashes.

The SWAN study tracked a group of over 3,300 women from diverse racial and ethnic backgrounds. The study, sponsored by the National Institutes of Health, measured the physical, biological, and psychological health of these women from over seven research centers around the country. While actual menopause age varied, the study uncovered what hot flash symptoms many women can expect during this transition period of life, from perimenopause to postmenopausal.

Click Here to Try Hormone Imbalance Testing Today

Types of Hot Flashes

The first type of hot flash is known as “early onset,” with symptoms beginning to affect a woman anywhere from 5-10 years before her last period. While this annoyingly premature onset of perimenopause symptoms can be frustrating, they luckily subside right around the time of a woman’s final menstrual cycle. On the opposite end of the symptom spectrum, some women are known as “late onset” hot flashers; they do not begin to experience symptoms until right after their last period. A rarer group of women are known as the “lucky few” who either only experience a few episodes of hot flashes or never any at all. The last type of hot flashes affects one in four women, who are known as the “super flashers.”  These women experience the full range of hot flash possibilities and then some, from early onset to post-menopause. They may rarely have a set “normal temperature range,” varying constantly instead.

Another study exploring hot flashes is a 2012 study published in the journal Obstetrics and Gynecology. This study found that the timing and duration of hot flashes is greatly influenced by a woman’s overall health. Women with high cholesterol levels, who consume excessive alcohol, or who were in poorer general health were more likely to suffer severe hot flashes. Race also seemed to be influential, as African-American women were more likely to be considered “super flashers.” However, while there were statistical trends in each group, the researchers noted that there was not enough sufficient data to conclusively point direct causation to the severity and onset of symptoms.

Reducing Hot Flashes With Bioidentical Hormone Replacement Therapy

Experts do know that regardless of cause, there are ways to reduce the severity and duration of hot flashes. Since cholesterol and lifestyle choices have been shown to play a role in symptom severity, choosing a healthy diet with limited alcohol intake can have a positive effect on symptoms. In addition, getting regular exercise and sleep can also help promote natural balance in the body, producing “feel good” hormones and releasing stress.

Bioidentical hormone replacement therapy (BHRT) is one of the best ways of treating hot flash symptoms because it addresses a woman’s whole state of health. The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists even reversed their earlier recommendation that women aged 65 and older should stop hormone replacement therapy due to the likelihood of menopausal symptoms returning. Instead of masking symptoms, BHRT works to bring a woman’s hormones into balance to benefit her overall health and thereby alleviate hot flashes and other menopause symptoms.

Contact a BodyLogicMD Physician Today

The expert physicians within the BodyLogicMD network are skilled at testing and monitoring hormone levels and creating a customized plan for women at every stage of menopause. Contact the BodyLogicMD physician nearest you to schedule an appointment and learn more about how hormone therapy can help reduce hot flashes and other menopause symptoms and improve overall health and wellbeing.

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Gluten Sensitivity: Beyond Celiac Disease

Gluten Free... Celiac Disease or Gluten Sensitive?

Imagine sitting at a restaurant when the waiter comes by with a steaming hot basket of fresh bread. It smells delicious, and the temptation to dig in is intense. However, for people who suffer from gluten sensitivity, the resulting abdominal pain, bloating, depressed mood, and fatigue that can follow is not worth the short-lived taste on the tongue. Even if they’ve tested negative for celiac disease, they still know that something is wrong. A diagnosis of celiac disease makes it relatively easy for a patient to move on, now able to make informed decisions as a result of having a name for their condition. However, for the many people who experience symptoms after eating gluten but do not have celiac disease, the distressing symptoms can be confusing and frustrating. However, new research is making sense of the symptoms that some people experience as a result of eating the protein found in wheat, barley, and rye. Read more…

Men and Hormonal Changes During Pregnancy

Men Experience Hormonal Changes During Pregnancy Too

The first time a woman misses her period, takes a test, and finds out she is pregnant, she probably knows that she is in for some major changes in her life and body. It can be awe-inspiring and thrilling, yet tinged with nervous anticipation. Even the “best case” stories of pregnancy always have some element of discomfort involved, whether minor or traumatic. One of the most common themes women hear is that they should expect to be highly emotional, set off by tiny things that would have never even caused a second thought before they were pregnant. The cause of these emotional changes is primarily due to their wildly fluctuating hormones. However, hormonal fluctuations during pregnancy are not just limited to women. New research shows that hormonal changes can occur in men during a partner’s pregnancy as well, with symptoms similar enough to their partners to have earned the name “sympathy pregnancy.” Read more…

Understanding Erectile Dysfunction

Are You Struggling With Erectile Dysfunction?

Men and women both can become self-conscious about certain aspects of aging. A receding hairline and a flabby belly are some common complaints that men may voice while ruminating about getting older with friends. However, even as common as it is, fewer men are open to sharing their experiences with erectile dysfunction—often suffering in silence as they deal with symptoms of erectile dysfunction like trouble getting or keeping an erection along with reduced sexual desire. Sometimes ejaculatory dysfunction, such as premature or delayed ejaculation, might also be an issue. Even if they have a supportive partner, pride and embarrassment often keep men from seeking treatment, hoping that the issue will resolve itself. However, erectile dysfunction almost always has a successful outcome when addressed, and furthermore, seeking treatment that addresses the root cause is important because erectile dysfunction may be a sign that something more serious is going on in the body. Read more…