Woman's Reproductive Health
Female hormonal health is not just related to menstruation
and menopause - it is a matter of lifelong well-being and longevity.
While a great number of women in our culture develop
some kind of sexual reproductive organ dysfunction, most are misled
about true sexual and reproductive health and what options exist
to achieve it. People tend to think of women's "hormone problems"
as starting in midlife with the onset of menopause. In fact, a dysfunctional
pattern can begin during adolescent years or even before birth.
The severity of hormonal problems may increase with age, but it
is not aging per se that is the root of declining health. It is
most often the cumulative physiological effects of stress that cause
disruption of the natural rhythms and balancing mechanisms of women's
hormones (see Quick Definition), thereby eventually compromising
overall health as well as sexual and reproductive health.
Quick Definition - Sex and stress hormones are chemical
messengers formed in endocrine organs and certain body tissues and
then carried in the blood to other areas of the body. Depending
on how specific their effects, hormones can alter either the functional
activity or the structure of one or more organs. Synthetic hormones
are different from naturally occurring hormones; they are structurally
altered (so as to be patentable).
Allopathic (conventional) medical thinking fails
to look for or treat the root causes of women's hormonal imbalances.
For example, more young women today are experiencing infertility
because they are not ovulating, yet they are being given fertility
drugs like Clomid without comprehensive hormonal evaluations. Though
these women often succeed in conceiving, they generally end up paying
a price for short-sighted symptom management. The future health
consequence is that other symptoms will appear and hormonal imbalance
will progress.
Similarly, women are led to believe that it is normal
to experience distressing menopausal symptoms. They anticipate having
to accept the conventional treatment choice of hormone replacement
therapy (HRT) with synthetic hormones. Women are encouraged to do
this in spite of the fact that estrogen supplementation places them
at risk for breast cancer and other serious health problems. HRT
and fertility drugs -- as well as birth control pills and other
hormonal therapies -- were all designed to treat only specific symptoms
with no regard for the effects they have on the entire body. Because
of this non-holistic approach, we are seeing an increase in the
incidence of not only breast cancer and sexual reproductive organ
dysfunctions but also uterine and ovarian cancer.
Another problem with conventional HRT is that it
generally employs the wrong forms of estrogen and progesterone.
Synthetic estrogens or the estrogens that are excreted in pregnant
mare urine are often used. And of the three estrogen hormones (estradiol,
estriol and estrone) found in women's bodies, most conventional
pharmaceutical products use only estradiol. Many HRT formulas also
contain synthetic progestin (as opposed to natural progesterone),
which is included to help balance the effects of synthetic estrogen.
Yet an artificial hormone cannot function in concert with another
artificial hormone to create balance in the body. Worse, these HRT
formulas ignore the increasingly common wisdom that it is progesterone
deficiency -- not estrogen deficiency -- that leads to early or
difficult menopause and many other health problems affecting women.
A lot of women are discovering that conventional
HRT does not give them the overall health and well-being they had
hoped for, and they are seeking out healthier alternatives. What
everyone will hopefully soon realize is that menopausal and sexual
reproductive problems are actually symptoms of overall hormonal
imbalances. Women need to get a complete picture of their hormonal
status and find appropriate therapeutic steps to maintaining balance.
Meanwhile, millions of women continue to experience
dysfunctions such as PMS, depression, decreased libido, fibrocystic
breasts, food and sugar cravings, uterine fibroids, irregular or
excessive uterine bleeding and endometriosis (see Quick Definition
below). Those whose dysfunctions are extremely painful or debilitating
are told that their "health is more important than their reproductive
organs" and that "a hysterectomy would be the best thing."
Unbelievably, an estimated trillion-plus dollars was spent during
the twentieth century to remove women's reproductive organs. Hysterectomy
now out-numbers almost all types of surgery performed in the U.S.
Reproductive organs play an important role in more
than reproduction. Many studies show that each aspect of the female
sexual anatomy serves an integral part in the health and well-being
of the entire body. Each function is part of the whole, part of
a system, or symphony, of interrelated parts and timing. g.
Women are rarely cautioned about this kind of fetal
stress before or during their pregnancies. Nor are they told how
the developing baby's adrenal glands will enlarge to meet the mother's
demand for additional stress hormones. A baby born in this state
of secondary hyper-stimulation produces too much stress hormone.
While the baby's adrenal glands can eventually decrease their output,
the glands will tend to reinflate more easily -- like a balloon
-- every time extreme demands are made upon them.If severe or chronic
stress persists, however, hyper-stimulation continues. As the baby
grows and matures into an adult, this maladaptive cycle will be
perpetuated, causing her sex hormones to be routed from her reproductive
system and used for her own stress purposes.
Note, however, that "normal" (negative)
results from conventional laboratory diagnostic tests do not always
mean normal function. Some tests do not reveal serious existing
conditions, others are not able to detect borderline conditions.
One example is thyroid testing, which cannot indicate how well thyroid
hormone (T3) is able to bind to target cells, a thyroid condition
that can be caused by high levels of estrogen. Woman suspecting
hormonal imbalances or experiencing distressing symptoms should
discuss testing with a healthcare practitioner.
Overall though, this is an excellent summary of
a natural perspective on how the hormone axis becomes imbalanced.
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