Is there a hormone heaven? You cannot live with them and you cannot live without them ... or can you?

AuthorHulem, Rebecca
PositionHarmone therapy

THESE DAYS, YOU CANNOT go near a women's magazine, newspaper, or the evening news without encountering yet another alarming discussion or editorial regarding hormone replacement therapy. If you are anything like my patients, friends, colleagues, and family members, you probably have reached a highly informed state of ... confusion.

Should you start taking hormones or stop? If you start, just how long should you continue? Should you take the synthetic or compounded variety? How does your doctor or health care practitioner determine which one to proscribe? What is the difference, anyway? Moreover, when you finally decide what to take, how do you determine in which form--pill, patch, cream, vaginal ling, or lozenge? Is there some sort of test available to help figure it all out? If there is, why hasn't someone offered it to you?

By definition, a hormone is a chemical messenger that targets a designated organ and stimulates it to function according to its design. Without hormones, our organs pretty much would remain inactive. A woman's ovaries, meanwhile, require specific hormones to stimulate them to produce other hormones that make you the woman that you are.

When you went through puberty, your hormones were functioning in their finest fashion, acting as agents of extraordinary change. You transformed from a little girl into a lovely young woman. You developed breasts and hips--and finally could keep a straight skirt up. There also were those pimples, pubic hair, and, off in the distant future, a prom dross to think about.

Pregnancy is another time in a woman's life when hormones, in the right amounts, bring about the extraordinary--a new little person. For the past four decades or so, a unique package of hormones (when in the right amount and in perfect balance) has delivered your regular monthly periods. If you ever have experienced PMS symptoms, however, this was a sign that your hormones were somewhat out of balance. Menopause, too, brings another time in a woman's life when hormones are out of balance.

The confusion began when medical science started exploring ways to help women continue the benefits of hormones after their bodies stopped producing them. After all, why give up a good thing? Then pharmaceutical companies saw the commercial viability of mass-producing and marketing hormones to aging women. Before you could say "testosterone," the market was so flooded with different brands and types of hormones that the days of going solo through menopause are a horror story from the distant past.

Pharmaceutical companies, through aggressive and well-funded marketing strategies, have convinced doctors, health care professionals and, most importantly, women that hormone replacement is necessary if they expect to live long and healthy lives. Advertising campaigns successfully have persuaded women that hormones are the magic elixir that will...

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