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Thread started 12/29/10 11:05am

Shanti0608

Women's health. NSFM

Any one got any good tips, remedies or stories about perimenopause?

[img:$uid]http://www.more.com/images/photo/image/58/56/photo/5856/iStock_7384944.jpg[/img:$uid]

[Edited 12/29/10 7:17am]

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Reply #1 posted 12/29/10 11:09am

Shanti0608

This is a good site explaining it.

http://www.womentowomen.c...pause.aspx

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Reply #2 posted 12/29/10 11:11am

XxAxX

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got nothing, except, heard it can be a bitch. rose

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Reply #3 posted 12/29/10 11:12am

Shanti0608

XxAxX said:

got nothing, except, heard it can be a bitch. rose

It really does suck to be a woman sometimes.

nod

hug

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Reply #4 posted 12/29/10 11:13am

XxAxX

avatar

Shanti0608 said:

XxAxX said:

got nothing, except, heard it can be a bitch. rose

It really does suck to be a woman sometimes.

nod

hug

hug

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Reply #5 posted 12/29/10 11:15am

Serious

avatar

Shanti0608 said:

XxAxX said:

got nothing, except, heard it can be a bitch. rose

It really does suck to be a woman sometimes.

nod

hug

It does, I get reminded of that every 3 1/2 weeks sigh.

grouphug

[Edited 12/29/10 3:15am]

With a very special thank you to Tina: Is hammer already absolute, how much some people verändern...ICH hope is never so I will be! And if, then I hope that I would then have wen in my environment who joins me in the A....
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Reply #6 posted 12/29/10 11:17am

Serious

avatar

And I cannot contribute anything else, but it was an interesting read and I guess I should watch myself if some of the symptoms changed without me even noticing it.

With a very special thank you to Tina: Is hammer already absolute, how much some people verändern...ICH hope is never so I will be! And if, then I hope that I would then have wen in my environment who joins me in the A....
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Reply #7 posted 12/29/10 11:17am

Shanti0608

Serious said:

Shanti0608 said:

It really does suck to be a woman sometimes.

nod

hug

It does, I get reminded of that every 3 1/2 weeks sigh.

grouphug

[Edited 12/29/10 3:15am]

comfort

I am having my 2nd period this month.

woot!

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Reply #8 posted 12/29/10 11:19am

Serious

avatar

Shanti0608 said:

Serious said:

It does, I get reminded of that every 3 1/2 weeks sigh.

grouphug

[Edited 12/29/10 3:15am]

comfort

I am having my 2nd period this month.

woot!

comfort hug

I am on my period every 3 or 3 1/2 weeks for about a week sigh.

With a very special thank you to Tina: Is hammer already absolute, how much some people verändern...ICH hope is never so I will be! And if, then I hope that I would then have wen in my environment who joins me in the A....
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Reply #9 posted 12/29/10 11:19am

Shanti0608

Serious said:

And I cannot contribute anything else, but it was an interesting read and I guess I should watch myself if some of the symptoms changed without me even noticing it.

Just wish the Dr's looked more into hormones when we have symptoms.

I went to the dr because I am having lots of symptoms that are not normal. She checked my thyroid, that was fine so now I need to go back and find out what's next.

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Reply #10 posted 12/29/10 11:21am

Serious

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Shanti0608 said:

Serious said:

And I cannot contribute anything else, but it was an interesting read and I guess I should watch myself if some of the symptoms changed without me even noticing it.

Just wish the Dr's looked more into hormones when we have symptoms.

I went to the dr because I am having lots of symptoms that are not normal. She checked my thyroid, that was fine so now I need to go back and find out what's next.

sad I really hope the doctors will check carefully and can help you pray.

With a very special thank you to Tina: Is hammer already absolute, how much some people verändern...ICH hope is never so I will be! And if, then I hope that I would then have wen in my environment who joins me in the A....
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Reply #11 posted 12/29/10 11:36am

XxAxX

avatar

Shanti0608 said:

Serious said:

And I cannot contribute anything else, but it was an interesting read and I guess I should watch myself if some of the symptoms changed without me even noticing it.

Just wish the Dr's looked more into hormones when we have symptoms.

I went to the dr because I am having lots of symptoms that are not normal. She checked my thyroid, that was fine so now I need to go back and find out what's next.

hmmm. could be something totally benign like a cyst, or a reaction to environmental stress. it's pretty stressful waiting for a diagnosis on something like this hey. hope you are well.

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Reply #12 posted 12/29/10 2:37pm

CarrieMpls

Ex-Moderator

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Shanti0608 said:

Serious said:

It does, I get reminded of that every 3 1/2 weeks sigh.

grouphug

[Edited 12/29/10 3:15am]

comfort

I am having my 2nd period this month.

woot!

omg, me too!!

My average is 25 days, but it can be anwyehre from 23-28. 28 is rare. sigh

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Reply #13 posted 12/29/10 3:01pm

Shanti0608

CarrieMpls said:

Shanti0608 said:

comfort

I am having my 2nd period this month.

woot!

omg, me too!!

My average is 25 days, but it can be anwyehre from 23-28. 28 is rare. sigh

This month is extra special. I have only had 7 days so far that I have not been bleeding. This happened in Oct as well, November I was lucky enough to only bleed for 10 days.

sigh

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Reply #14 posted 12/29/10 3:24pm

Genesia

avatar

Shanti0608 said:

Serious said:

And I cannot contribute anything else, but it was an interesting read and I guess I should watch myself if some of the symptoms changed without me even noticing it.

Just wish the Dr's looked more into hormones when we have symptoms.

I went to the dr because I am having lots of symptoms that are not normal. She checked my thyroid, that was fine so now I need to go back and find out what's next.

On December 2, I had my first appointment with a doctor who has absolutely no qualms about prescribing bio-identical hormones - and works with a local compounding pharmacy. (We actually have two compounding pharmacies in the Madison area, which is nice.)

I walked out of there after my first appointment with a prescription for progesterone cream - and the estrogen ain't far behind. (I have a follow-up appointment in a couple months.) The progesterone, alone, has really helped my sleep.

A book I recommend highly is "The Natural Hormone Makeover" by Dr. Phuli Cohan. It talks in depth about all the hormones - thyroid, cortisol, the estrogens (it's more than one hormone), progesterone, testosterone, etc.

Even though the doctor has checked your thyroid, it might still be low. Most labs only do very basic thyroid testing - they don't get into the specifics of each thyroid hormone (again, there are several). And the threshold for what constitutes "low thyroid" is set so low that almost nobody qualifies, when they could benefit from thyroid hormone.

I feel for you, I really do. I looked for a doctor for five years before my hairdresser told me about this doctor. (She'd heard about her from another client.) Premarin and other artificial hormone therapies ruined things for so many women. It's incredibly sad.

We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves.
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Reply #15 posted 12/29/10 3:32pm

Shanti0608

Genesia said:

Shanti0608 said:

Just wish the Dr's looked more into hormones when we have symptoms.

I went to the dr because I am having lots of symptoms that are not normal. She checked my thyroid, that was fine so now I need to go back and find out what's next.

On December 2, I had my first appointment with a doctor who has absolutely no qualms about prescribing bio-identical hormones - and works with a local compounding pharmacy. (We actually have two compounding pharmacies in the Madison area, which is nice.)

I walked out of there after my first appointment with a prescription for progesterone cream - and the estrogen ain't far behind. (I have a follow-up appointment in a couple months.) The progesterone, alone, has really helped my sleep.

A book I recommend highly is "The Natural Hormone Makeover" by Dr. Phuli Cohan. It talks in depth about all the hormones - thyroid, cortisol, the estrogens (it's more than one hormone), progesterone, testosterone, etc.

Even though the doctor has checked your thyroid, it might still be low. Most labs only do very basic thyroid testing - they don't get into the specifics of each thyroid hormone (again, there are several). And the threshold for what constitutes "low thyroid" is set so low that almost nobody qualifies, when they could benefit from thyroid hormone.

I feel for you, I really do. I looked for a doctor for five years before my hairdresser told me about this doctor. (She'd heard about her from another client.) Premarin and other artificial hormone therapies ruined things for so many women. It's incredibly sad.

Thanks.

I saw ppl recommending that book online.

I have been reading up on bioidenticals. I think once I am back in the states, I will have to find a dr that is interested in figuring out what is going on.

The dr that sent me to have my thyroid checked just shrugged it all off as stress because I have a toddler and live away from my family combined with the crap weather.

Sis in law told me that Starflower (borage oil) helped get her hormones back in place after she had her children.

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Reply #16 posted 12/29/10 3:38pm

Genesia

avatar

Shanti0608 said:

Genesia said:

On December 2, I had my first appointment with a doctor who has absolutely no qualms about prescribing bio-identical hormones - and works with a local compounding pharmacy. (We actually have two compounding pharmacies in the Madison area, which is nice.)

I walked out of there after my first appointment with a prescription for progesterone cream - and the estrogen ain't far behind. (I have a follow-up appointment in a couple months.) The progesterone, alone, has really helped my sleep.

A book I recommend highly is "The Natural Hormone Makeover" by Dr. Phuli Cohan. It talks in depth about all the hormones - thyroid, cortisol, the estrogens (it's more than one hormone), progesterone, testosterone, etc.

Even though the doctor has checked your thyroid, it might still be low. Most labs only do very basic thyroid testing - they don't get into the specifics of each thyroid hormone (again, there are several). And the threshold for what constitutes "low thyroid" is set so low that almost nobody qualifies, when they could benefit from thyroid hormone.

I feel for you, I really do. I looked for a doctor for five years before my hairdresser told me about this doctor. (She'd heard about her from another client.) Premarin and other artificial hormone therapies ruined things for so many women. It's incredibly sad.

Thanks.

I saw ppl recommending that book online.

I have been reading up on bioidenticals. I think once I am back in the states, I will have to find a dr that is interested in figuring out what is going on.

The dr that sent me to have my thyroid checked just shrugged it all off as stress because I have a toddler and live away from my family combined with the crap weather.

Sis in law told me that Starflower (borage oil) helped get her hormones back in place after she had her children.

The thing I really wanted to avoid was being put on drugs (anti-depressants or sleeping pills) - which is what most doctors want to do. My "problems" aren't in my head, they're in my ovaries.
I have never been depressed - and my sleep is only bad for about a week out of every month. So let's treat the cause, not the symptoms.

We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves.
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Reply #17 posted 12/29/10 3:45pm

Shanti0608

Genesia said:

Shanti0608 said:

Thanks.

I saw ppl recommending that book online.

I have been reading up on bioidenticals. I think once I am back in the states, I will have to find a dr that is interested in figuring out what is going on.

The dr that sent me to have my thyroid checked just shrugged it all off as stress because I have a toddler and live away from my family combined with the crap weather.

Sis in law told me that Starflower (borage oil) helped get her hormones back in place after she had her children.

The thing I really wanted to avoid was being put on drugs (anti-depressants or sleeping pills) - which is what most doctors want to do. My "problems" aren't in my head, they're in my ovaries.
I have never been depressed - and my sleep is only bad for about a week out of every month. So let's treat the cause, not the symptoms.

Exactly! She mentioned post partum, of course!

I told her that the symptoms I am having are causing me stress more than the baby because the symptoms make it hard to function.

pissed

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Reply #18 posted 12/29/10 3:49pm

Genesia

avatar

Shanti0608 said:

Genesia said:

The thing I really wanted to avoid was being put on drugs (anti-depressants or sleeping pills) - which is what most doctors want to do. My "problems" aren't in my head, they're in my ovaries.
I have never been depressed - and my sleep is only bad for about a week out of every month. So let's treat the cause, not the symptoms.

Exactly! She mentioned post partum, of course!

I told her that the symptoms I am having are causing me stress more than the baby because the symptoms make it hard to function.

pissed

Well, of course!

Hormones are tricky. Most doctors aren't schooled in bio-identical hormone therapy (any more than they're schooled in nutrition) and know only about the dangers of the synthetic, one-size-fits-all stuff like Premarin. And even when they are educated, every woman is different, so getting the hormones right is always a matter of trial and error. You have to find someone who is willing to spend the time - which, the way most medical practices are set up, is extremely difficult.

We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves.
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Reply #19 posted 12/29/10 4:02pm

Shanti0608

Genesia said:

Shanti0608 said:

Exactly! She mentioned post partum, of course!

I told her that the symptoms I am having are causing me stress more than the baby because the symptoms make it hard to function.

pissed

Well, of course!

Hormones are tricky. Most doctors aren't schooled in bio-identical hormone therapy (any more than they're schooled in nutrition) and know only about the dangers of the synthetic, one-size-fits-all stuff like Premarin. And even when they are educated, every woman is different, so getting the hormones right is always a matter of trial and error. You have to find someone who is willing to spend the time - which, the way most medical practices are set up, is extremely difficult.

Yes, it is really difficult. At our drs surgery office, I cannot make an appointment ahead of time. I have to call on the morning that I want to go in to see if there are any openings for the day. Since the surgery has more than one dr, you do not always see the same dr. They all rotate to different centers. Throw in the fact that I have to take a small person along with me, it does get a bit complicated.

I am hoping the starflower oil will help me sort out my bleeding.

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Reply #20 posted 12/29/10 4:49pm

PositivityNYC

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is NSFM not safe for men? lol wink

good read -- thanks!

Hag. Muse. Web Goddess. Taurean. Tree Hugger. Poet. Professional Nerd. Geek.
"Resistance is futile." "All shall love me and despair!"
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Reply #21 posted 12/29/10 5:36pm

Genesia

avatar

Shanti0608 said:

Genesia said:

Well, of course!

Hormones are tricky. Most doctors aren't schooled in bio-identical hormone therapy (any more than they're schooled in nutrition) and know only about the dangers of the synthetic, one-size-fits-all stuff like Premarin. And even when they are educated, every woman is different, so getting the hormones right is always a matter of trial and error. You have to find someone who is willing to spend the time - which, the way most medical practices are set up, is extremely difficult.

Yes, it is really difficult. At our drs surgery office, I cannot make an appointment ahead of time. I have to call on the morning that I want to go in to see if there are any openings for the day. Since the surgery has more than one dr, you do not always see the same dr. They all rotate to different centers. Throw in the fact that I have to take a small person along with me, it does get a bit complicated.

I am hoping the starflower oil will help me sort out my bleeding.

I don't know about the starflower oil, but something else you can try is chinese herbs. Dong quai will help to regulate estrogen and Vitex helps with progesterone. Take dong quai in the first half of your cycle, and vitex after you ovulate (until you get your period).

We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves.
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Reply #22 posted 12/29/10 6:44pm

paintedlady

avatar

Genesia said:

Shanti0608 said:

Yes, it is really difficult. At our drs surgery office, I cannot make an appointment ahead of time. I have to call on the morning that I want to go in to see if there are any openings for the day. Since the surgery has more than one dr, you do not always see the same dr. They all rotate to different centers. Throw in the fact that I have to take a small person along with me, it does get a bit complicated.

I am hoping the starflower oil will help me sort out my bleeding.

I don't know about the starflower oil, but something else you can try is chinese herbs. Dong quai will help to regulate estrogen and Vitex helps with progesterone. Take dong quai in the first half of your cycle, and vitex after you ovulate (until you get your period).

reading *taking notes*

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Reply #23 posted 12/29/10 7:32pm

Shanti0608

PositivityNYC said:

is NSFM not safe for men? lol wink

good read -- thanks!

nod

giggle

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Reply #24 posted 12/29/10 7:35pm

Shanti0608

Genesia said:

Shanti0608 said:

Yes, it is really difficult. At our drs surgery office, I cannot make an appointment ahead of time. I have to call on the morning that I want to go in to see if there are any openings for the day. Since the surgery has more than one dr, you do not always see the same dr. They all rotate to different centers. Throw in the fact that I have to take a small person along with me, it does get a bit complicated.

I am hoping the starflower oil will help me sort out my bleeding.

I don't know about the starflower oil, but something else you can try is chinese herbs. Dong quai will help to regulate estrogen and Vitex helps with progesterone. Take dong quai in the first half of your cycle, and vitex after you ovulate (until you get your period).

Cool. Will look into those. Problem is right now, my periods are so messed up. Like I said earlier, I have only had 7 days this month that I have not bled.

They are lasting really long and then only one week between.

pout

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Reply #25 posted 12/29/10 7:39pm

CarrieMpls

Ex-Moderator

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Good stuff. Keeping it all in mind.

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Reply #26 posted 12/29/10 7:40pm

Shanti0608

CarrieMpls said:

Good stuff. Keeping it all in mind.

I will let you know if I have any luck with the Starflower oil.

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Reply #27 posted 12/30/10 5:50am

ZombieKitten

Shanti0608 said:

Genesia said:

The thing I really wanted to avoid was being put on drugs (anti-depressants or sleeping pills) - which is what most doctors want to do. My "problems" aren't in my head, they're in my ovaries.
I have never been depressed - and my sleep is only bad for about a week out of every month. So let's treat the cause, not the symptoms.

Exactly! She mentioned post partum, of course!

I told her that the symptoms I am having are causing me stress more than the baby because the symptoms make it hard to function.

pissed

My periods didn't settle back into a proper rhythm again until Max was 18 months. I was getting very painful mittelschmerz (ovulation pain) and feeling very down at around that time of the month. But by the time he was 2 or 3, things have gone back to a predictable pattern. Much heavier bleeding (than I ever had before I had kids) for 2 days, then 3-4 very light bleeding after, and all in all relatively painfree.

Post partum, (the time after giving birth) is still a period of adjustment for your body physically, especially hormonally.

Keep an eye on any potential PPD symptoms as well though, don't rule it out, the sufferer can often be the last one to recognise it. As far as depression fixes for the time being probably, look into natural alternatives - I'm sure UKs dark winters are not helping you at all.

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Reply #28 posted 12/30/10 6:15am

Cerebus

avatar

Shanti0608 said:

PositivityNYC said:

is NSFM not safe for men? lol wink

good read -- thanks!

nod

giggle

hmph! Hmph. I've read every word up to this point and found it a very interesting and informative read. nod More men should definitely know that "once a month" is not exactly accurate. Talking about periods is anathema to a lot of men and it shouldn't be.

The only thing I can add is that I know testosterone has a very interesting side affect on women. lurking

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Reply #29 posted 12/30/10 6:36am

ZombieKitten

Cerebus said:

Shanti0608 said:

nod

giggle

hmph! Hmph. I've read every word up to this point and found it a very interesting and informative read. nod More men should definitely know that "once a month" is not exactly accurate. Talking about periods is anathema to a lot of men and it shouldn't be.

The only thing I can add is that I know testosterone has a very interesting side affect on women. lurking

batting eyes

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