NATURAL VS. SYNTHETIC HORMONES Not too long ago Dr. Lee was confronted at a conference by the
owner of a large herbal products company who claimed that Dr. Lee
was incorrect in referring to the progesterone used in the creams as
"natural" because it was manufactured or synthesized in a
laboratory, and that made it synthetic. This is a confusion in
semantics that we hear frequently. In fact progesterone is far more
natural to your body than any plant is because your body actually
manufactures the identical substance. The progesterone manufactured
in the laboratory has the identical molecular configuration of the
progesterone that your body makes. It does not matter if the body
makes the hormone, or a chemist makes it from a plant extract or
from anything else. If it is the identical molecule, it is the
identical hormone. The source of the progesterone is unimportant in
this context.
We usually think of the word synthetic as
meaning something that is produced artificially, and is not found in
nature, such as plastics and pharmaceutical drugs. For example, the
"hormone" Provera is made from the same substances that natural
progesterone is made from, but the molecular configuration of it is
changed in the laboratory so that it is not identical to anything
found in nature. But natural progesterone made in the laboratory is
identical to that made in the human body. In other words, what makes
a substance "synthetic" or "natural" in this context is whether or
not it can be found in nature.
The same distinctions apply to estrogens. The two
types of estrogen in Premarin taken separately are natural (found in
nature) and not synthetic, but not all of the estrogen in Premarin
is natural to humans. About half of it is human estrogen, and about
half is horse estrogen -- a molecule not found in the human body.
It's ironic that the manufacturer of Premarin has tried to advertise
it as a natural product. Since about half of the estrogen in
Premarin is estrone (which is natural to humans) and the other half
consists of a different estrogen that is natural only to horses and
is extracted from pregnant horse urine, it is natural, strictly
speaking, only if you are half horse and half human! It's
unfortunate that so much of estrogen research has been done with
Premarin, so we don't have a truly accurate knowledge base of the
effects of human estrogen versus horse estrogen.
Natural estrogens extracted from wild yams or
soybeans that are identical to those made by the human body are
easily available by prescription in the form of creams, tablets and
patches. These are estrone, estradiol and estriol, so there is no
reason to take horse estrogen.
Plants do not make human hormones, but some plants
make compounds that have some hormonal effect. These, in their
natural form, are called phytohormones ("plant-based" hormones).
Although they are not the same as our hormones they may have some
hormonal activity. We'll cover those in more detail shortly.
Some plants make substances that are quite similar
to animal cholesterol or animal hormones, but they have no hormonal
effect. Such compounds, called sterols, are easily chemically
modified so that they become identical to human hormones. An example
of this is the diosgenin that is extracted from wild yams and
soybeans to make human hormones in the laboratory.
To read more, please read Dr. Lee’s book, What
Your Doctor May Not Tell You About Premenopause… Order Now
ESTROGEN DOMINANCE Estrogen dominance is a term coined by Dr. John R. Lee in his
first book on natural progesterone. It describes a condition where a
woman can have deficient, normal or excessive estrogen, but has
little or no progesterone to balance its effects in the body. Even a
woman with low estrogen levels can have estrogen dominance symptoms
if she doesn't have any progesterone.
THE CAUSES OF ESTROGEN DOMINANCE Strictly speaking, it's possible that we are all -- men, women
and children -- suffering a little from estrogen dominance, because
there is so much of it in our environment. You would have to
virtually live in a bubble to escape the excess estrogens we're
exposed to through pesticides, plastics, industrial waste products,
car exhaust, meat, soaps and much of the carpeting, furniture and
paneling that we live with indoors every day. You may have
on-and-off sinus problems, headaches, dry eyes, asthma or cold hands
and feet for example, and not know to attribute them to your
exposure to xenohormones. Over time the exposure will cause more
chronic problems such as arthritis and premenopause symptoms, and
may be a direct or indirect cause of cancer.
"It's as if my body breathed a big sigh of
relief ."
"My life is back on track and my symptoms are
gone."
"I thought my ability to think clearly was gone
for good, but it's back and better than ever."
"I had a second ultrasound and the fibroid is
half the size it was six months ago. My doctor says I don't need
to have a hysterectomy after all."
"My PMS and tender breasts are a thing of the
past. And I'm in control of my emotions the week before my
period."
"After three months on progesterone, folic acid
and vitamin B6 I am no longer testing positive for cervical
dysplasia."
"Since I began using progesterone cream I
haven't had one migraine headache."
"I've lost 11 pounds and I think most of it was
water weight. I no longer feel like a balloon."
"I can sleep again and I'm much less moody and
anxious."
"We just wanted to let you know that we had a
healthy baby boy."
These are the kinds of letters, faxes and phone
calls that Dr. Lee and Dr. Hanley receive every day from women whose
premenopausal symptoms cleared up after they began using a natural
progesterone cream. It may sound too good to be true, but it's
merely a case of supplying the body with what it needs to maintain
balance. You've read about how out of balance our estrogenic
environment has become; it's no wonder women are feeling much better
when they use some progesterone.
Unlike estrogen, progesterone is not a generic name
but is the name of the hormone produced by the corpus luteum after
ovulation, and in smaller quantities by the adrenal gland. It is
synthesized in humans in a biochemical pathway leading from
cholesterol to pregnenolone to progesterone. In turn, progesterone
is the precursor of corticosteroids and testosterone. Progesterone
is also synthesized, in copious amounts, by the placenta during
pregnancy.
Progesterone is a specific molecule made by mammals
and has multiple roles in your body. It effects every tissue in your
body including the uterus, cervix, and vagina, the endocrine
(hormonal) system, brain cells, fat metabolism, thyroid hormone
function, water balance, peripheral nerve myelin sheath synthesis,
bone cells, energy production and thermogenesis, the immune system,
survival and development of the embryo, and growth and development
of the fetus. Though referred to as a sex hormone, progesterone
conveys no specific secondary sex characteristics and as such cannot
be called a male or female hormone.
Progesterone is highly fat-soluble compound
exceedingly well absorbed when applied transdermally or onto the
skin. According to hormone researcher David Zava, Ph.D.,
progesterone is by far the most lipophilic, or fat-loving, of the
steroid hormones. It circulates in the blood, carried by fat-soluble
substances such as red blood cell membranes. Some 70 to 80 percent
of ovary-made progesterone is carried on red blood cells and thus is
not measured by serum or plasma blood tests. This progesterone is
available to the body for use, and readily filters through the
saliva glands into saliva where it can be measured accurately. The
remaining 20 to 30 percent of progesterone in the body is
protein-bound and is found in the watery blood plasma where it can
be measured by serum or plasma blood tests. However, only 1 to 9
percent of this progesterone is available to the body for use. That
is why saliva testing is a far more accurate and relevant test than
blood tests in measuring bio-available progesterone.
The fall of progesterone levels at menopause is
proportionately much greater than the fall of estrogen levels. While
estrogen falls only 40 to 60 percent from baseline on average,
progesterone can decline to nearly zero. Furthermore, anovulatory
cycles will cause low progesterone levels on and off throughout the
premenopausal years.
UTERINE ENLARGEMENT AND
FIBRIODS The uterus is one of the first organs to manifest symptoms when
a woman's hormones are out of balance. Two of the most common
uterine symptoms of premenopause syndrome are an enlarged uterus,
and uterine fibroids. Women with PMS often experience painful
periods (dysmenorrhea) which are most often caused when the
endometrial lining of the uterus extends into the muscular wall of
the uterus (adenomyosis). When shedding of the endometrium occurs
(menstruation), the blood is released into the muscular lining,
causing severe pain. Conventional medicine treats this pain with
NSAIDS (non-steroidal-anti-inflammatory drugs) such as ibuprofen,
but ignores the underlying metabolic hormonal imbalance that caused
it. The problem can often be simply resolved by restoring proper
progesterone levels, which restores normal growth and shedding of
the endometrium.
Estrogen dominance causes the uterus to grow, and
without the monthly balancing effect of progesterone, it doesn't
have the proper signals to stop growing. In some women this results
in an enlarged uterus that presses on other organs, such as the
bladder, and often on the digestive system, and generally causes
discomfort and heavy menstrual bleeding. In other women estrogen
dominance results in fibroids, which are tough, fibrous,
non-cancerous lumps that grow in the uterus. Some fibroids can grow
to the size of a grapefruit or cantaloupe, causing constant bleeding
and such heavy menstrual periods that the blood loss is akin to
hemorrhaging.
Fibroids always shrink at menopause, but the most
common course of action a doctor takes when a patient comes in with
a fibroid is to remove the uterus. The explanation given is that a
fibroid is too difficult to remove without irreversibly damaging the
uterus. But in most cases this is no longer true. If you do end up
needing to have a fibroid surgically removed, find a doctor who can
do it without removing your uterus with it. If you have many small
fibroids, it may be more difficult to remove them. On the other
hand, their smaller size may make it easier to treat them without
surgery.
PREMENSTRURAL SYNDROME
(PMS) Premenstrual syndrome (PMS) is by far the single most common
complaint of premenopausal women. Current estimates are that severe
PMS occurs in 2.5 to 5 percent of women, and mild PMS occurs in 33
percent of women. PMS was first described in 1931 as a "state of
unbearable tension," a description most women can understand to a
certain degree. Some women have PMS from the time they begin having
menstrual cycles but for most, PMS begins in the premenopausal
years, around the mid-thirties, and becomes increasingly severe as
the years go on. Although it's possible to create a list of dozens
and dozens of PMS symptoms, the most common are bloating/water
retention and the resulting weight gain, breast tenderness and
lumpiness, headaches, cramps, fatigue, irritability, mood swings,
and anxiety. In women with severe PMS, irritability and mood swings
can become outbursts of anger and rage. By definition PMS symptoms
occur in the two weeks before menstruation and sometimes for a few
days into menstruation.
You should know right up front that there is no
magic bullet for PMS. A little bit of progesterone will help a lot,
and in some women it solves the problem, because it offsets the
effects of environmental estrogens and anovulatory cycles, but PMS
is a multi-factorial problem that needs to be handled on many
physical levels as well as on the emotional level. You'll discover
more about the emotional level when we talk about the emotional side
of premenopause in the next chapter.
Stress is almost always involved in PMS. Stress
increases cortisol levels, which blocks progesterone from its
receptors. Therefore, normal progesterone levels do not mean
that supplemental progesterone is not needed. Extra progesterone is
necessary to overcome the blockade of its receptors by cortisol.
When a woman discovers she has a handle on controlling her PMS, it
will help her manage stress better. Then lower levels of
progesterone will work normally again.
For years it was assumed that since PMS symptoms
occur when progesterone levels are normally relatively high, that it
was progesterone that was causing the symptoms. Theoretically,
symptoms could relate either to elevated progesterone levels or
progesterone deficiency (estrogen dominance). Elevated levels of
progesterone are unlikely since, during pregnancy, progesterone
levels are 10 to 20 times higher than normal mid-cycle levels and
similar symptoms do not occur. Progesterone deficiency (estrogen
dominance) is much more likely since many of the symptoms correlate
with estrogen dominance symptoms, most notably water retention,
breast swelling, headaches, mood swings, loss of libido, and poor
sleep patterns.
A woman's response to her own cyclical hormones is
extremely individual, and this is part of the reason that it has
been so difficult to pin down the causes of PMS. Estrogen levels
that cause anxiety and bloating in one woman will have virtually no
effect on another. A woman who sails through an anovulatory cycle
with hardly a ripple is in complete contrast to the woman who is
plagued by migraines or anger premenstrually when she doesn't
ovulate. Birth control pills and premenopausal hormone replacement
therapy (HRT) will cause a long list of side effects (including PMS)
in many women, while others will say they feel fine. This is why
it's so important that you become familiar with your own body and
your own symptoms, and don't let anybody tell you that what you're
experiencing is "just an emotional problem," or that an
antidepressant or tranquilizer is all you need.
PMS AND THE STRESS
CONNECTION You know from the chapter on hormone balance that stress
increases your levels of cortisol, a hormone released primarily by
the adrenal glands in response to feelings of fear, danger or even a
sense of competition. In excess, cortisol can stimulate feelings of
irritability, anger and rage. Cortisol is also released when you
push yourself to work through tiredness day after day. Think of
cortisol as a backup energy system. Like the batteries that back up
your electronics when the electrical power goes out, you can't just
keep using them to give you full power, or they'll wear out and
you'll also lose that source of energy. In the same way, you can't
depend on your cortisol and your adrenal glands to keep taking you
beyond your physical limits or eventually you will create depleted
organs and chronic fatigue.
Since cortisol and progesterone compete for common
receptors in the cells, cortisol impairs progesterone activity,
setting the stage for estrogen dominance. Chronically elevated
cortisol levels can be a direct cause of estrogen dominance, with
all the familiar PMS symptoms.
High cortisol levels also affect blood sugar.
Cortisol sends glucose (blood sugar) flooding into the cells. The
initial rush of glucose into the cells may feel great, but twenty or
so minutes later your body will be working overtime to produce more
glucose and you'll be searching the cupboards or your desk drawers
for candy bars, cookies and potato chips to get your blood sugar and
your energy back up. The majority of those empty calories will be
converted to fat and if you keep up the pattern long term, you'll be
struggling to keep your weight down and your energy up.
Fluctuating blood sugar creates another type of
negative feedback cycle, where high levels of sugar in the blood
stimulate the release of adrenaline, which in turn stimulates the
release of cortisol, which in turn causes a craving for quick
calories, and so forth.
THE REWARDS OF NATURAL
HORMONE BALANCE: A TESTIMONIAL It's difficult to describe the relief that women feel when they
balance their hormones and come out of the ill effects of
premenopause syndrome. One of the best descriptions we've read comes
from a woman named Linda, who has turned a longer version of the
following letter into a brochure and is handing it out to any woman
who will take it:
Mood swings, chronic fatigue, foggy thinking,
depression, leg cramps, migraine headaches, heavy painful
periods, anemia, endometriosis, shooting back and extremity
pain, water retention and bloating, sleep dysfunction, anxiety
attacks, thinning hair, allergies, chronic sinus infections,
fever blisters, acne, dry skin, infertility, hypoglycemic
symptoms and fibroids are only a few of the many symptoms that
dominated my life for almost two years.
Those years were so challenging physically and
emotionally, I thought I'd never survive! At the age of 30,
doctors were giving me every conflicting diagnosis in the world,
taking my money for doing so, and yet leaving me without any
help or suggestions for getting help. I saw gynecologists,
endocrinologists, dermatologists, neurologists, and assorted
other "-ologists." Their comments ranged from, "The tests show
that you are perfectly healthy. It must be in your head, take
this Xanax," to "Something is definitely wrong, but I don't know
what it is." Emotionally I felt like I was on the verge of a
mental breakdown. I felt very alone.
Finally I drove four hours to see a specialist
who put me on synthetic estrogen, progesterone and testosterone.
At first, I felt so good I thought this was the miracle for
which I had been praying. But within two years of starting this
treatment the symptoms came back. The doctor's answer was to
continue increasing my dosage until I was at the maximum level:
six implants, the patch and shots in-between. I went from seeing
him every six months to every three months. The hormones were
only effective for two months and the last month before I could
get back for more implants I felt emotionally and physically as
if I had been thrown off a ten-story building. For six years I
lived my life surviving from office visit to office visit. I was
having constant back pain, heavy bleeding, anemia and varying
degrees of all my old symptoms, some worse than before. My pap
smears began indicating pre-cancerous cells. This went on for
about a year before I finally agreed to have a hysterectomy. The
surgery alleviated the bleeding, anemia and back pain for
obvious reasons -- my uterus was three times its normal size and
density! However, all the other symptoms continued.
It was three years after my surgery before I
learned about natural progesterone and began using it. After a
brief period of withdrawal from synthetic hormones, the only
hormone I have used during the past four years is
a natural progesterone cream. I also have combined this with a
balanced diet, exercise and nutritional supplements. My life has
changed dramatically. Today, I feel like I did when I was in my
twenties: I have energy; can think clearly; no depression; my
skin is wonderful; I am losing weight; can sleep at night; no
more migraines; my hair has stopped falling out; the dark facial
hair is disappearing; and my allergies have disappeared. No more
antihistamines! This is the answer to my prayers. My family is
glad to have the "real me" back.
It's sad to say that Linda's story is not all that
unusual. It is very common to hear stories from women whose symptoms
are less severe, but who are suffering from similar problems. Dr.
Lee has been (wrongly) accused of talking only about natural
progesterone cream as if it is the magic solution to a woman's every
problem, but this letter demonstrates why. Progesterone cream is
certainly not a magic potion. But it is the best remedy we've found
so far to counteract the effects of living in a state of xenohormone
excess. We do not naturally need to supplement progesterone. Mother
Nature has equipped us to live a long, healthy robust life given a
wholesome environment. If we were living in a stress-free,
unpolluted world; if we were eating whole, fresh organic foods; and
if we got plenty of outdoor exercise, we probably wouldn't ever need
progesterone.
NUTRITION AND HORMONE
BALANCE:
How a good diet with the right foods can help balance your hormones. Although natural progesterone can have wonderfully curative
effects on the symptoms of premenopause syndrome, it works best when
you eat wholesome foods, pay attention to possible food allergies,
and take nutritional supplements. The rewards of eating a nutritious
diet are more than worth the sacrifices. You'll decrease your risk
of future heart disease, cancer, diabetes, osteoporosis and
arthritis. If your diet has consisted largely of high calorie,
nutrition-free foods such as candy bars and cookies, your energy and
moods will improve dramatically. If you suffer from indigestion,
gas, bloating, and constipation, you'll be happy to know that
eliminating food allergens and good nutrition are nearly always a
cure. You'll catch fewer colds and flus because your immunity will
improve, it will be easier to drop excess fat, and your skin will
clear up. In some cases, a well-designed, individualized diet,
supplement and exercise program is all that's needed to restore
balance during the premenopause years and beyond. Depending on your
exposure to xenohormones, you may well find that you don't need to
use natural progesterone.
What are these magical foods you're supposed to be
eating? Which of the endless diets touted this month is the one to
follow? Which of the hundreds of supplements found on health food
store shelves should you be taking? There's no one answer for
everybody, but this chapter gives you enough guidelines to begin to
create your own personal hormone balance program.
Some women are coming from a lifetime of hardly
thinking about what foods they put in their mouths, except for those
times they've tried to lose weight. The more ambitious have gone to
the bookstore for the latest best-selling diet books. Some say
they've tried the high-carbohydrate, low-fat diets and felt worse
than ever, while others say they feel great on such a diet but can't
seem to stick to it. Still others swear by the popular diet books
that promote balanced intake of fat, protein, and carbohydrates,
while some feel them to be too regimented, unpalatable, or hard to
follow. There's a lot of frustration around food for most women, and
this is especially true of premenopausal women who are starting to
gain some serious weight for the first time in their lives and can't
seem to do anything to stop it.
Your first assignment is to stop worrying so much
about the weight gain. This is not in any way an encouragement to
become obese, but rather to let go of the starving model ideal. To
the extent that you accept your womanly body you will be giving that
gift of acceptance to the next generation of women as well! Mother
Nature designed women so that they would put on little bit of weight
premenopausally. It will get you through menopause more gracefully
and protect you from osteoporosis and strokes. If you don't allow
the weight gain to become obesity, the latest research shows that
you won't be at a higher risk for heart attacks and cancer,
especially if your keep your hormones balanced. You can assume that
you are obese if your weight is interfering with your ability to
move around physically, or if it is causing weight-related problems
such as diabetes, arthritis, and difficulty breathing.
In spite of the charts and graphs and studies put
out by everyone from the American Heart Association to the federal
government, there is no one diet that is right for everyone.
Nobody can hand you a piece of paper or a book that tells you
exactly what you need to eat unless they have collected a lot of
data first. Anyone who has done the work of figuring out their ideal
foods and supplements can tell you that it's a process that takes
some time, attention and tracking. It takes trying new things. It
means getting rid of the processed foods you depend on for comfort
and replacing them with real, nourishing, substantial whole foods.
It also means paying close attention to how your body responds to
different foods and eliminating those that are having adverse
effects on your health. No one can do this for you. The good news is
that it can be a fun piece of detective work with great rewards.
THE LIGHT AND DARK SIDES OF
SOY
How to eat soy so that it helps. Today, it's all but impossible to find a health-related magazine
or TV show that doesn’t shout out the benefits of soy foods for the
prevention of menopause symptoms, breast and other cancers, heart
disease and osteoporosis. In the past decade, the soy industry has
poured hundreds of millions of dollars into the research, marketing
and advertising of soy foods, and it has been well rewarded for its
efforts. However, while we agree that certain soy foods, eaten in
moderation, can be a healthy addition to the diet, we believe that
women who are eating soy with every meal, or even every day, may be
damaging their health. Soy has its good side, but it also has its
bad side, which has been largely ignored by those rushing to cash in
on this nutritional fad.
Traditional Asian soy foods such as tofu, tempeh,
and miso have been a dietary staple in that part of the world for
centuries, and they are increasingly found in Western diets. Western
food manufacturers have also developed a slew of new soy foods,
using these little beige beans as an ingredient in protein powders,
hot dogs, burgers, cheese, cereals, sports bars, and other
convenience foods. Soy milk, texturized soy protein, and soy cheese
have been touted as nutritious alternatives to cow's milk products
and meat. Supplement companies create pills from soy phytochemicals
and advertise them as natural medicines for relief of menopause
symptoms, or as protection against cancer, heart disease, or
osteoporosis. Soy powders are sold as supposedly healthy meal
alternatives. Some of these products are good for you, and some are
best avoided. In this chapter you’ll find out how to eat soy foods
so they enhance your health….
SOY AND MENOPAUSE With all that we know about the pitfalls of conventional
medicine's treatment of women in menopause, it makes sense that
women are turning to “natural” approaches to relieve menopausal
discomforts. The beneficial effects of estrogen on these discomforts
are indisputable, but as women become more informed they see that
the risks – especially of breast cancer – may be too great to
justify its use. Others stop using conventional HRT because of side
effects, and look to natural remedies to help them control their
menopause symptoms.
This growing interest in natural solutions for
treating menopausal symptoms has prompted the food and supplement
industries to develop alternatives to conventional pharmaceutical
estrogens such as Premarin. The soy foods industry has been poised
to benefit most from this search for natural remedies for menopause
because of soy's high phytoestrogen content.
The lay press and the soy industry have widely
promoted the message that soy phytoestrogens act, in effect, as
surrogate estrogens. Such a message gives women the impression that
they can use soy to naturally relieve symptoms of falling estrogen
levels at menopause. While the research does show that isoflavones
behave like estrogens in the body the conclusion that they are all
the medicine a woman needs to help her through menopause is not
borne out by recent clinical studies on soy and menopausal symptoms.
Soy phytoestrogens have very little effect on
vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes, night sweats and vaginal
dryness. In one comprehensive study from the Bowman Gray School of
Medicine in North Carolina, researchers looked at the effects of soy
phytoestrogens on women aged 45 to 55 with menopausal symptoms. This
study was big news because the women who took a phytoestrogen-rich
soy supplement reported a 50 percent decrease in the severity of
their hot flashes. What most news stories didn't mention, however,
is that the placebo group reported a 35 percent reduction.
Furthermore, this study showed small reductions in the severity
of hot flashes, but none on their frequency. In other
words, these women were having just as many hot flashes as they did
before they added soy foods or supplements, but the intensity of
those hot flashes were diminished. While decreased intensity is
certainly a good thing when it comes to hot flashes, soy estrogens
are clearly not as potent as many forms of conventional estrogen
replacement which often eliminate hot flashes quickly and
completely.
A recent study of women with vasomotor symptoms at
the Mayo Clinic showed no benefits from soy protein isolates, which
have high levels of phytoestrogens. This has also been Dr. Zava’s
experience in analyzing saliva hormone level results accompanied by
detailed questionnaires; soy phytoestrogens simply don’t work well
to control vasomotor symptoms. The isoflavones in soy are
aromatase inhibitors which lower the levels of estrogens made by the
body, which is counter-productive to controlling vasomotor symptoms.
Soy phytoestrogens do have the estrogenic
effect of stimulating the growth of breast cancer cells in tissue
cultures. Several studies presented at a recent soy symposium showed
that soy protein isolates stimulate the growth of normal breast
cells much the way that natural estrogens do, and of course this
would add to breast cancer risk if progesterone is not present.
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