Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Beat Menopause With Hormone Replacement Therapy

Hormone replacement therapy can give some much needed assistance to decrease the distress menopause can cause to the body. These symptoms are due to the body aging and producing less estrogen.

This treatment has been prescribed for many years. This therapy can use one or more medications to help balance the estrogen levels in the body.

This treatment is largely used by women entering menopause and is prescribed for a brief time to help relieve the symptoms when you enter menopause. This can be prescribed for one to five years.

It may also be used for a longer duration by women who have had a hysterectomy, or who may suffer from other medical ailments that require estrogen replacement.

HRT is a common abbreviation for hormone replacement therapy. This therapy can protect the body from osteoporosis.

It has been clinically proven to also reduce the danger of heart disease and cancers that start in the intestines and rectal areas. Studies have even shown it decreases the chance of Alzheimer's disease.

This treatment consists of one or more lab created estrogen hormone replacements. It frequently will include estrogen and synthetic progesterone called progestogens and can also include testosterone.

Although this is not the same hormone your body produces, once the hormones are introduced into the system your body will utilize and absorb these as one.

A major study has been done on the use of HRT as a treatment for menopause, and they concluded that there are some serious risks involved in using them.

If this is an option that your doctor gives to you, express any concerns and ask questions to fully understand this as a treatment option.

If you are taking it, then before you stop treatment you should talk to your doctor as well. While the risks are real, the benefits and risks of the hormone replacement therapy need to be assessed on an individual basis.

You may have a greater chance for having gall bladder disease and increased blood pressure while taking an HRT. If you have a family history of breast cancer, this can increase the risk for that.

Speak to your doctor and become educated about all the risks associated with this therapy, and ask how they apply to you personally based on your own medical past and family history.

While the risks are a major concern, HRT is still the leading and most effective treatment for severe symptoms associated with menopause.

A low estrogen dose may be able to relieve night sweats and hot flashes and enable you to sleep at night.

It may also decrease urinary symptoms, including the need to go and minor incontinence, as well as keep the vagina from atrophying and becoming painfully dry.

By : Ben_Pate

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