5 essentials for your menopause toolkit with Dr. Mary Claire Haver & Dr. Sarah Berry

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 19 มิ.ย. 2024
  • Learn how your body responds to food. Take our FREE quiz 👉 zoe.com/podcast
    The menopause transition can bring unexpected challenges - the effects can significantly impact daily life and long-term health.
    Dr. Mary Claire Haver is a board-certified gynaecologist and a menopause specialist. She's helped thousands of women in perimenopause and menopause to realise their health goals. In today’s episode, she joins Jonathan and ZOE's Chief Scientist Dr. Sarah Berry to shed light on what to expect during these life stages.
    Sarah and Mary Claire describe practical strategies for managing symptoms, critical conversations to have with healthcare providers, and how to advocate for yourself effectively in medical settings.
    Follow ZOE on Instagram: / zoe
    Timecodes:
    00:00 Introduction
    01:22 Quickfire questions
    05:53 There is a lack of menopause training in medical school
    07:02 Most women are going into menopause blind
    07:43 Why menopause symptoms vary
    09:30 The hormonal ‘zone of chaos’
    12:11 ZOE PREDICT data on menopause symptoms
    13:36 How long do perimenopause symptoms last?
    17:52 Perimenopause comes earlier than you think
    18:34 Why hormone tests are worthless
    20:53 The risk of chronic disease in menopause
    24:53 Why does menopause increase hunger?
    27:20 Your doctor may not be as supportive as you want them to be
    28:39 Medicine and research is male-dominated
    32:34 How to talk to your doctor about menopause
    34:12 Pregnancy research - 10x more extensive than menopause research!
    35:14 Mary Claire’s tool kit of strategies for menopause
    36:34 What are the long-term health benefits of hormone replacement therapy?
    38:36 Is HRT is safe for most women?
    42:47 Brand new ZOE study results: diet and menopause
    49:16 Top 3 tips to help with symptoms
    54:34 What is ‘frozen shoulder’ and how can you treat it?
    Mary Claire's new book: The New Menopause
    www.amazon.co.uk/New-Menopaus...
    Mentioned in today's episode:
    The controversial history of hormone replacement therapy, from Medicina
    Link: www.mdpi.com/1648-9144/55/9/602
    Menopause Transition and Cardiovascular Disease Risk: Implications for Timing of Early Prevention: A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association, from Circulation.
    Link: www.ahajournals.org/doi/10.11...
    Dr. Vonda Wright's website: www.drvondawright.com/
    Have feedback or a topic you'd like us to cover? Let us know here: gf6hx47iu5g.typeform.com/topi...
    Episode transcripts are available here: zoe.com/learn/category/podcasts
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ความคิดเห็น • 246

  • @tammycrumpacker4624
    @tammycrumpacker4624 หลายเดือนก่อน +168

    I'm only 11 minutes into this video, and I am in tears about the lack of knowledge and the lack of caring by our medical professionals. I know this first hand. Women make up 50% of the population but are treated like we don't matter or matter as much. 😢

    • @joinZOE
      @joinZOE  หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      It's important to talk about women's health. 💛

    • @01jausten
      @01jausten หลายเดือนก่อน +25

      I wish I could say I knew all this already, as a nurse who’s worked in ob/gyn for years, had an Oestrogen dependent breast cancer and went through a speeded up menopause at 48 due to Tamoxifen, but so much of this has been a surprise to me as well. I’m now slowly getting past the sadness and I’m on to the rage part.

    • @rhondajansenvanvuuren392
      @rhondajansenvanvuuren392 25 วันที่ผ่านมา +8

      The frustration is real. My Mirena was taken out this week. I have been prescribed Venlofaxine. No hormones allowed. I am also in tears.

    • @susanp5393
      @susanp5393 22 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

      As life expectancy of our species is 40 years, our bodies is not designed to go through menopause.A woman should be able to reproduce till end of her life like other mammals, so menopause is not a natural condition. As now we live much longer than our bodies is designed for by nature, indeed we suffer the consequences of lack of hormons etc. Medicine can't do much about it. Homeopathy and naturopathy offer some help but even that is limited.

    • @Gem_ini
      @Gem_ini 19 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

      You’re so right. Massive change needed on a grand scale xx

  • @mandyb6088
    @mandyb6088 12 วันที่ผ่านมา +25

    I am a nurse, all those statements are so true! I wanted to scream. I had no training or education in menopause. I went from being a very healthy, international athelete, to someone who had extreme fatigue, muscle stiffness, brain fog, massive changes in blood lipids, raised CRP. I was trying to find out want was going on. My GP would start to treat me like a was a head case. He never once mentioned menopause. I kept saying I am putting on so much weight and I am not changing anything. My doctor spluttered and said that's not possible!!! Please keep doing this work, it is so important.

    • @sylviasolder7389
      @sylviasolder7389 7 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      It's frustrating. I mentioned it to my GP if it was menopause, & he snapped at me and said:" don't be silly, you're still young" (50). You need to eat properly." I find now that it's no use talking to them because no matter what I say, they will ALWAYS not going to believe me. I always come out worse than I went in.😢😡

    • @eog2133
      @eog2133 7 วันที่ผ่านมา

      I definitely can relate 3 years in and out the doctors office and finally this last visit , I requested my hormones be tested and only for the doctor to say I was post menopausal 😢! Three years of headaches , bloodwork out of wack , inflammation , cholesterol issue! None recognized I was premenopausal, until this last visit I was very vocal about testing my hormones telling her about my hot flashes , fatigue , low libido etc.. the brain fog and fatigue was getting the best of me!! I was under performing at work due to the brain fog! I thought I had developed ADHD.. I’m so very grateful tho this last doctor was able to pinpoint and give me some answers and hopefully relief! I’ll continue to educate my self on this and help others around me recognize the symptoms….

    • @tamarac7394
      @tamarac7394 6 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      Same stuff with me. Very active, healthy, then boom fatigue, muscle cramps, stiffness, brain fog, some hot flashes, vertigo with periods.

  • @StephyGrowsWeed
    @StephyGrowsWeed หลายเดือนก่อน +61

    43:10 nutrition 46:59 plant rich diet 48:27 soy isoflavones 49:42 the 3 big things (more fiber, less added sugars, more muscle training)

    • @Helen-jv9mq
      @Helen-jv9mq 4 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      THANKS

  • @milyabrams4
    @milyabrams4 2 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

    I can honestly say that Dr Haver has changed my life. I have been struggling with perimenopause ( didn’t even know what that was ) now menopause and I came across a video in TH-cam . I started watching her videos, I got her books, found a hormone specialist and I feel like I was born again. I learned nothing from my doctor or my OBGYN . When I first mentioned some of the symptoms I was told you are too young, I was already 47. Now I follow the Galveston diet, I changed my eating habits, I am taking the right supplements and I am on HRT. There is no reason to suffer! Thank you so much !!!! ❤

  • @chi-chichou3807
    @chi-chichou3807 7 วันที่ผ่านมา +13

    Good menopause DIY toolkit:
    1. Mediterranean diet
    2. probiotic, turmeric
    3. soy isoflavones, isoflavones
    4. 25-gram fiber in diet per day
    5. limit the amount of added sugars to less than 25-gram per day
    6. consistent resistance training, muscle training (strong muscle = strong bones)
    7. wear a weighted west

  • @jbrinzable
    @jbrinzable 24 วันที่ผ่านมา +32

    I came across menopause Barbie on TH-cam last year. She is also a dr who went through it. Her channel opened my eyes to what was happening to me. My mum and aunts would not talk about it so I was on my own. I actually thought I was going crazy with the brain fog. So I educated myself and made a drs appt armed with a checklist of symptoms and research papers. My dr listened and I have been on hrt for 9mths now. Omg what a difference it has made to my life. I am still carrying extra pounds around my middle and the search for a remedy for that lead me to Dr Mary Clair. I cut out sugar and complex carbohydrates and increased my protein intake. I have lost about 5lbs on my one. Do I ordered the Galveston diet book, which only came yesterday. I have high hopes for the future now. And hope to be back in the size 10 cloths in that future. Best wishes to all you lovely ladies out there on your personal journeys back to yourself. And for all of you who have daughters please prepare them, I have mine. Love and blessings ❤

  • @cathysamuels4638
    @cathysamuels4638 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +8

    I had 3 medical professionals dismiss my hot flashes, heart palpitations, frozen shoulder and hair loss! When I asked my GYN about MHT she told me I would get cancer!!!!! I am now 6 years post menopause and thankful I have found a new GYN, pelvic floor physical therapist, and these new resources! Thank you for the discussion!

    • @cathysamuels4638
      @cathysamuels4638 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

      They made me feel like I was nuts!!!

    • @Petunia-fl9lu
      @Petunia-fl9lu 13 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      hopefully that six years hasn't cost you too much bone.

    • @ShoppingEmail-dr1fs
      @ShoppingEmail-dr1fs วันที่ผ่านมา

      doctors who withhold hormone treatment 'in case' you get cancer are protecting themselves. the increase in numbers in study groups is because they have more mammograms, many are slow growing cancers and not fatal and but the numbers are LOW. patches and gels reduce clot risks and localised estrogen is safe even for breast cancer patients. its ridiculous how much you have to suffer! my first doctor had a beard and looked like a man, a feminist health centre for women is not where you want to go if you want a script lol.

  • @ysach.891
    @ysach.891 หลายเดือนก่อน +31

    Game changer ... after two years dealing with frozen shoulder and right after that hot flashes started, it was when I felt like my body was screaming " you have to move". I ended up joining the gym and now start my work out routine at 6am - two days strength training and 3 days moderate cardio (Monday to Fridays). After six weeks, my hot flashes went away. I do really hope they never come back!

  • @janegibbs-cohen4837
    @janegibbs-cohen4837 9 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

    I had 2 frozen shoulders one after the other and never once was I asked if I was menopausal/ post menopausal. What a revelation.

    • @pamthomassen283
      @pamthomassen283 2 วันที่ผ่านมา

      I had the same last year. Two frozen shoulders, I thought I would never be able to do my bra up again let alone pull my pants up or the basics like plugging in my seat belt..the struggle was real and pain was intense. I couldn’t sleep on either side and my already difficulty sleeping was compounded by the pain and not being able to find a pain free way to sleep. I spent a fortune on GP visits, Chiro, physio, pharmacy on pain meds and eventually sleeping tablets after two years of poor sleep. I had cortisone injections into my shoulders and let me tell you that is super painful 😢.Never ever did anyone of my health care practitioners ask me about my menopausal status. At 52-53 I was still having my period and had never had hot flushes until a few months ago which coincided with missing 2 periods. Everyone told me if you are still having your period you can’t have menopause. Even my gynae in Oct 2023, last year, suggested that I sounded depressed and that maybe she could write me a referal for someone to speak to after I told her all my symptoms. The Mel Robbins interview with Dr Haver was life changing for me. It all made so much sense. I have shared that pod cast with all my friends and will keep telling people to listen up because no one talks about menopause openly. I started on the patches last week and look forward to learning more through research & interviews like the Zoe one with Dr Haver. Thank you for sharing this information with us ladies.

  • @LYLISTO
    @LYLISTO 17 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

    I have had all vertigo, joint pain, flushes, tinnitus, bloat, digestive, forgetfulness, dry skin. I feel twenty years older all of a sudden.

  • @Chillman742
    @Chillman742 29 วันที่ผ่านมา +22

    My weighted vest is an 11 month old baby - had him at 45. 😊

  • @user-es6ft5xg8h
    @user-es6ft5xg8h 25 วันที่ผ่านมา +12

    All these menopause symptoms are probably being diagnosed separately as anxiety, depression, fibromyalgia, osteoarthritis, dementia, etc, yet the root of the cause is low hormones. Every woman should have not only a family doctor but a gyne doctor who is knowledgeable about perimenopause and menopause to guide the patient thru these stages .

  • @lolakathol4109
    @lolakathol4109 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

    My aunt went through horrible menopause. Never understood, one minute she was nice, the next minute she was yelling, and screaming! I thought she was going crazy. It was never talked about, and still not talked about. So happy dr. Haver,is educating us. I have both of her books! And have shared the book with my daughter so she doesn’t have to suffer the way my aunt did, or the thousands of women out there! Thank you dr. Haver❤️

  • @eugeniakyriakopoulou5212
    @eugeniakyriakopoulou5212 หลายเดือนก่อน +47

    Finally!! Thank you ZOE for inviting Dr. Mary Claire Haver!

    • @joinZOE
      @joinZOE  หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      You're so welcome!! 💛

    • @grahambevan3873
      @grahambevan3873 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@joinZOE😊😅😮😢🎉😂l❤

  • @MarthaM-xq6sv
    @MarthaM-xq6sv หลายเดือนก่อน +18

    After my periods stopped I got sore knees, sore neck, muscle weakness and aches, terrible fatigue, frequent migraine. I thought there must be something seriously wrong with me and went to the doctor multiple times for tests etc. She never once suggested it was menopause - nor did other doctors in the practice. It probably was as these symptoms came on overnight and I have adjusted to them over the years.

  • @Leo-mr1qz
    @Leo-mr1qz หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    I went straight to MyAlloy in the U.S. My HMO here in California can barely detect the difference between a lung infection and allergies. It's SO very beurocratic. 😮
    MyAlloy assed my symptoms, declared I was peri-menopausal, and off I went with supplemental estrodial and progesterone. 2 mo ths in, and I feel SO much better than before I began the treatment.

  • @wendydelucca6918
    @wendydelucca6918 9 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    I am literally crying, all so true and maddening! It is time to change the status quo!

  • @Rebecca-ib3yg
    @Rebecca-ib3yg หลายเดือนก่อน +15

    I recently had a blood test done which flagged that my blood sugar was higher than it should be. I was shocked because I generally thought I had a healthy diet, but mostly because my diet hasn't changed and I'd always had healthy markers before. This podcast gives a very clear explanation for the reason. I am going through menopause and this is a major symptom. We really need to learn more and have better education around how we can make changes to prepare for these changes. The doctor I saw was not helpful, simply told me things I should not eat, without suggesting what I should eat instead. When another symptom is feeling hungry, this is doubly unhelpful. Thanks Zoe and keep up the great work.

    • @JoyceWrightPierce
      @JoyceWrightPierce หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Same here. I was told that I was prediabetic, elevated cholesterol and high blood pressure 😮All during menopause and post menopause🤔

    • @rocioyanes6031
      @rocioyanes6031 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I just got my tests the past week and glucose also had gone to the roof I was so nervous and sad and I just realizaed with this video that since i had an hysterectomy 4 months ago and the ovaries where removed as well this are the results. Not my cardiologist nor my gynecologist told me about these consequences and the cardiologist gave me 2 medicines to reduce these levels without taking into account my previous surgery. A real dissapoinment with health practitioners out there. I am in a very sad position since being in an underdeveloped country, I can only rely on talks like this that hopefully will give me some tools to use from.now.

  • @MrsCSenk
    @MrsCSenk หลายเดือนก่อน +17

    I’m sharing this episode with every woman I know! What also needs to be included in the conversation is how in the US, HRT treatment is cost-prohibitive to many women because it is not covered by insurance, therefore, not accessible if you’re not willing to pay out of pocket! Thank you for spreading education into the world! ❤

    • @Petunia-fl9lu
      @Petunia-fl9lu 13 วันที่ผ่านมา

      that's outrageous. seriously.

  • @hopegood9839
    @hopegood9839 หลายเดือนก่อน +45

    Was surprised testosterone wasn’t mentioned. Women produce more testosterone than oestrogen in their ovaries but it’s rarely replaced in the UK. Yet a good level of testosterone helps increase and maintain muscle strength meaning we support our joints. Not to mention our libido

    • @saskhiker3935
      @saskhiker3935 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I think the problem with testosterone in women is we know even less about estrogen. Also you can easily take too much testosterone and no testosterone treatment has been approved in women.

    • @stephaniejohnson2455
      @stephaniejohnson2455 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      You can get it privately but it costs a fortune

    • @anne-louisegoldie
      @anne-louisegoldie หลายเดือนก่อน

      It's really appalling that menopausal women are so discrimated against. There was a testosterone patch approved and licensed for women in the UK around 2005-ish . The company stopped supplying it, perhaps because doctors didn't want to prescribe it?
      I've heard there's a new testosterone patch for women coming soon, next year or two. Fingers crossed 😊xx ​@@saskhiker3935

    • @anne-louisegoldie
      @anne-louisegoldie หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Yes, it does so many beneficial things. As all the hormones do 💛

    • @biquarius
      @biquarius 16 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Naturopath’s can prescribe compounded bioidentical hormones including a testosterone cream. Your bloodwork should be recent in order for Doctors of Naturopathic medicine to review to compound exactly what you need. If you’re in the SF Bay Area, I HIGHLY recommend Dr. Victoria Hamman.

  • @lyndaannibal8990
    @lyndaannibal8990 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    I have suffered with very intense hot flashes for almost 24 years, from perimenopause to post menopause. Since I have changed my diet to the Zoe recommended diet, lots of variety and fibre, my hot flashes have decreased. Also, I was told last September I had type 2 diabetes. In November 2023, I discovered Zoe and the glucose goddess. From that night on, I changed the order of how I ate and my entire life changed. My blood sugar went from 7 to 6.3 in less than five weeks, and three months later it is now 6. Now if I could just get rid of the hot flashes forever.

    • @NiaLaLa_V
      @NiaLaLa_V 22 วันที่ผ่านมา

      I'm a junk food vegan but I end up high fiber because I LOVE beans and I am barely having hot flashes but all the other symptoms are kicking my ass. I haven't cried this much since I was 14. Thank science for all the women sharing information with us, I would be so lost without it.

  • @DaniElla-45MPs
    @DaniElla-45MPs 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

    These conversations are so important for us women facing menopause! I was only 44 when my periods stopped. In my late 30s I was perimenopausal, but no doctor seemed to consider that. Somehow it was almost liberating when my periods became irregular. Doctors still said no way was I going through menopause, but I knew better. I am experiencing a plethora of symptoms, sleeping disorder, anxiety , weight gain and joint pain being the worst. Disrupted sleep makes it really hard to make all the good life style decisions since your energy level is so low . I am a mother of two teenagers , carer for a ill relative and we are to move to a new house soon. I am in survival mode but my doctor still wonders how I am too young to be in menopause.

  • @valeriachierico3029
    @valeriachierico3029 29 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    I’m sooooooo grateful that finally we talk about menopause. I have all the symptoms, the worse are hot flashes, every half an hour or so, anytime of the day and night. It’s so constant that I can’t stand anymore.

  • @pamkoakes
    @pamkoakes หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Of all symptoms, hot flashes were the worst for me. Over 50 per day! Trouble sleeping was number 2. Love my estradiol patch. ❤

  • @wendymimes4786
    @wendymimes4786 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    My main symptoms r dizziness,lightheaded,memory problems, hot flashes! Sore joints

    • @SerenityHomeStyling
      @SerenityHomeStyling หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      I have the same symptoms you have... Dizziness is one of my main symptoms so I went on hrt snd my dizziness dissappear for a while then I had to use more hrt patches.

  • @carriesmith7165
    @carriesmith7165 23 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    I listened to what this doctor had to say about nutrition and exercise and just in the past week completely overhauled my diet and exercise and I already feel some relief. I have the occasional hot flush, was ravenously hungry, had ALOT of indigestion, bloating where I look 7mos pregnant after just a small meal, extreme fatigue where I would sleep all weekend and not accomplish a thing, alot of aches and pains, a migraine that went on day after day for months last year which I had really no choice but to continue working through at full time job, i don't think I have cold shoulder but I seem to have an inability to relax and breathe deep always very clenched and does cause me pain and discomfort in the right shoulder. I had just an absolutely wicked perimenopause nonstop bleeding for several years until finally got to a gyno actually about another issue and she straight away put me on an IUD and it gradually stopped the excessive flooding bleeding. That was the worst, again all while working full time. So much fun to be working having anxiety, hot flashes and gallons of blood flooding out of you. And yes not one person warned me of any of this other than the weight gain and inability to lose weight in menopause. Thanks to these people for giving us their knowledge on the topic, so grateful. Will continue watching for more information.
    Btw, for migraines I used to take Tylenol which just added to the fatigue, i found that using the peppermint oil rollerball on temples works very well as does having a peppermint oil diffuser in my office that runs all day, office smells like peppermint but it's a pleasant scent and coworkers do not mind at all.

  • @hp20-20
    @hp20-20 4 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    I went to a cardiologist - a highly regarded individual (male) - with debilitating palpitations, my normal resting heart rate of 42 spiking to 195 for no apparent reason, making me feel sick, dizzy and weak.
    All sorts of tests and thousands of £ later, I was told he couldn’t see there was anything wrong with me. I was 49. Menopause was never mentioned.

  • @livechangechallenge
    @livechangechallenge หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    Thank you for this video, it explains so much more than my go and research has found. I’m someone who HRT isn’t suitable for, could you do a follow-up video centred on nutritional changes that can help other women specifically in our situation. Many thanks, Adele

  • @ceciliacase3901
    @ceciliacase3901 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    I am listening to this and I’m thinking OMG why didn’t my Dr., tell me this? I have had so many symptoms, I have used over the counter supplements for the past 9.5 years brain fog , headaches, hot flashes, frozen shoulder, weight gain, no sleep maybe 3-4 hours if I’m lucky lack of energy, depression it just goes on and on… I was told that my frozen shoulder was arthritis, I’m just getting old. I fought back on that but after 3 years of pain, finally they listened. It made no sense that one shoulder to hurt so bad and after 2 years it went away and then the other arm started. I seriously thought I was losing my mind and my quality of life was mind. I finally went into my Dr and demanded a specialist. Now I’m finding out it might be too late, but my Dr is trying.
    Ladies fight to get seen by a doctor who specializes in hormones, this is your life.

    • @Helen-jv9mq
      @Helen-jv9mq 4 วันที่ผ่านมา

      It’s not too late. Restoring your missing hormones improve health & prevent osteoporosis and heart disease for the rest of your life!

  • @monicamead1884
    @monicamead1884 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Thanks you, Jonathan, Dr. Sarah & Dr. Mary Claire for the information and a great interview!

  • @HerbaceousSW
    @HerbaceousSW 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    thank you for this. this conversation has given me an understanding of some points that weren't clear to me.

  • @indraseurattan7109
    @indraseurattan7109 2 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

    I'm 61 and I'm still having symptoms of menopause, I have a frozen shoulder at present, have had it for the past 6 months, it's in the thawing stage.
    I also get joint and muscle pains, internal tremors, electric shock, dry eyes and skin.
    I get this strange symptom that I haven't read about anywhere...it's a crashing sound in my head and I see a white flash of light even though my eyes are closed.
    I also experience most of the normal symptoms women talk about like hot flashes, night sweats, anxiety. Mood changes, headaches, dry mouth, no líbido, weight gain, high cholesterol, fatigue, exhaustion, no energy,plus more.
    I went thru peri menopause for 10 years, now I'm in post menopause 4 years .

  • @karinalbero
    @karinalbero 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Thank you so much for this episode. Have hade post covid sympthoms and anxiety for a year (regular check ups with physicians and physiotherapist) but I now realize that some parts of it could be perimenopause as well.

  • @soggymoggytravels
    @soggymoggytravels หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Thank you for making the time for this topic.

  • @raewise6345
    @raewise6345 21 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    Yes, we do stop moving as much! Because our energy level has TANKED, it's a huge catch-22 and we are caught! Thank you so much💜 for spreading this information far and wide so that We can educate our physicians ☹️

  • @czykma
    @czykma 21 วันที่ผ่านมา

    As always great podcast. Lots of great information. There is always something new that catches my attention. Thank you!

  • @sallycorc2435
    @sallycorc2435 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    I have had 2 frozen shoulders during peri menopause, about 5 years apart. I was never told it was related to pre menopausal symptoms. My GP advised me to rest the first time I had which was the worst advice and resulted in a severe frozen shoulder which meant I could barely lift my arm. The second time I was better informed so got better treatment and kept exercising. Really interesting to see it now linked as a symptom.

  • @maggielo1133
    @maggielo1133 25 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Huge thanks to the Dr and she is amazing.

  • @kerriemooney3498
    @kerriemooney3498 23 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    This is so informative. How sad that people are suffering because they don’t have access to this knowledge, and how wrong is it that the medical profession focus their data on males, which is not helpful to females in many ways.
    I’m 48 now, still having regular periods but started with sleep disturbance a few years ago, heavy bleeding and now frozen shoulder.
    It was Marie Claire who taught me that it was a symptom of perimenopause. But all the doctors I have seen have wanted to refute that. Although they have given me help (physio, steroid injection and I am now on HRT).

    • @user-es6ft5xg8h
      @user-es6ft5xg8h 22 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Be careful with the steroid injections as it can lower bone density.

  • @anne-louisegoldie
    @anne-louisegoldie หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Food, sleep, movement, strength training, and HRT. Thank you 💛
    Hopefully there will one day be a home testing kit for our hormones, like there is for blood sugar levels for diabetics.
    To see where our natural hormones are in perimenopause, and then to check if we're absorbing our HRT properly in post menopause. It's such an issue trying to get tested by the GP, so much better to do it ourselves at home as often as needed. Levels do matter, not just whether or not we're still getting symptoms of hot flushes. Especially for bone loss protection after menopause 😊xx

    • @NiaLaLa_V
      @NiaLaLa_V 22 วันที่ผ่านมา

      I want home test kits for everything, including common cold types, especially since some of them can kill us so we need to know when to see a doctor and when to just stay home and rest.

  • @delanahealey4862
    @delanahealey4862 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Started Menopause at aged 38. I am now 68 and suffering continuously throughout that time. I live in Western Australia, and the medical response is not good. I still feel different symptoms now, and if you need help from a specialist, you need plenty of money. I feel helpless. Thank you for this video.

  • @SamYoungnz
    @SamYoungnz หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Thank you so much for this podcast. It was very interesting. I was also wondering if Zoe is available in countries other than the UK and the USA? Or if there is an international roll-out plan?

  • @elintakvam9606
    @elintakvam9606 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I absolutely love the zoe podcasts, I've learned so much from them! It's always a treat when a new episode comes. But Jonathan, when can a gal from Norway be a zoe member?

    • @joinZOE
      @joinZOE  หลายเดือนก่อน

      Hopefully one day 🤞thanks for the support in the meantime!

  • @idaalmonte253
    @idaalmonte253 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    Hot flashes and sleepiness nights are so draining 😢 I exercise but definitely have to make changes on my diet and get hormones therapy. I’am 56 and take zero meds, very healthy since birth but hot flashes are becoming way too often.

  • @shroumfet3289
    @shroumfet3289 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    The one video i was looking forward! I wish i could have been selected for the USA study because my doctors didn't even think about my hormonal changes . Of course I am clueless about what to expect but I recently came to conclusion that my problems/symptoms are perimenopause

    • @joinZOE
      @joinZOE  หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      We hope you found this podcast useful 🙏

  • @Anita-wh4vr
    @Anita-wh4vr หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thank you. Great discussion.
    What often is not discussed are symptoms of estrogen dominance, which really are not fun at all either.

  • @susanafelibertt8658
    @susanafelibertt8658 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    Whole world woman needs this information specially doctors 😮 all lenguajes please

  • @constanzaocampo5910
    @constanzaocampo5910 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    When is Zoe coming to Mexico as a part of the population research group? How can I be of help?
    Thank you so very much for all the invaluable information you share.

  • @susanp5393
    @susanp5393 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

    I still have hot flushes very often every day even at the age of 68. I have a whole food plant based diet since years, and most of my meals are even raw to ensure that the glycemic load of my meal stays low. I also do not eat wheat. The higher the glycemic load, the more intense the hot flushes after eating. I experienced hot flushes the first time the month my periods stopped at the age of 52.
    My mother suffered hot flushes till she died at the age of 86.
    Some of my friends however never experienced hot flushes so it depends on the person.

    • @joinZOE
      @joinZOE  หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Thank you for sharing your story with us.

    • @hazeldellis
      @hazeldellis หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      My mum also still gets hot flushes, she 86! She never had HRT but definitely suffered, but maybe not as much as I suffer!!

    • @anned6913
      @anned6913 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I very much sympathise, I am in the same situation at 69, though I can't tie any hot flush to any particular food. To read the comments here that some people have suffered up to 87 gives me no hope. I had hoped that the 10 years so far suffered would see an end to it.

    • @NiaLaLa_V
      @NiaLaLa_V 22 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      I'm stumped too. I'm one of the junk food vegans and I am barely getting hot flashes. I do eat a ton of beans so I get fiber above average levels but I only eat tofu sometimes and I don't drink soymilk or eat edamame. Maybe the hot flashes is in our genetics more than we know.

    • @susanp5393
      @susanp5393 22 วันที่ผ่านมา

      ​@NiaLaLa_V Some women suffer hot flashes, not all of course, and some have hot flashes for a short period at the beginning of menopause only. ​Food is not certainly the cause but can trigger this condition in some individuals, also hot humid climate/weather is a terrible trigger for this condition.

  • @phylliskagimoto6207
    @phylliskagimoto6207 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

    I wish scientists would include eastern diets in their research because the Mediterranean diet only addresses half the world’s population. There must be reasons Japan has one of the longest life expectancies and doesn’t even have a word for menopause.

    • @4everyoung24
      @4everyoung24 23 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

      They do have a Japanese word for it. And there is some research and they suspect it from isoflavones in soy. They do have menopause. Maybe their obvious symptoms are less (hot flashes) and maybe they would express trouble with symptoms less because of culture differences. I don’t know. But I would like to see some studies done for sure, especially on all symptoms of menopause.

  • @katesylvester-kilroy7030
    @katesylvester-kilroy7030 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Wonderfully impactful podcast. Thank you this will help so many women and I feel finally vindicated about my terrible frozen shoulders journeys lasting 5 years and I just knew it was hormone related and was just told I’m female and over 40. It was half a decade of preventable pain and virtually no sleep. I am so pleased things are changing through quality presentations such as this. Thank you

    • @lindajones4849
      @lindajones4849 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Sure, it's just being female and over 40. That's called PERIMENOPAUSE.

  • @MajorekKatarzyna
    @MajorekKatarzyna หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Amazing information. Any chance you could enable subtitles in Polish? I would love to be able to share this with my mum.

  • @sarahb4330
    @sarahb4330 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    There's so much great info in this, thank you - but why oh why given the multiple times it was emphasised that we need to get away from the idea that hot flashes are the main symptom of menopause is the thumbnail focused on hot flashes - I nearly didn't watch it!

  • @dawnbrock7137
    @dawnbrock7137 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Great interview!
    Very informative.

  • @rowenab1750
    @rowenab1750 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    OMG I had frozen shoulder in each of my shoulders in peri-menopause. I had NO idea it was related!! It was so painful and took over a year to resolve for each one with therapy. This was the early days of over ten years of so many dreadful symptoms that I wished I would just die because I didn't want to be in this body anymore.

  • @nancypedrick5596
    @nancypedrick5596 21 วันที่ผ่านมา

    After experiencing my hot flashes along with an anxiety attacks, it became just way too much for me- along with migraines (I had migraines as a kid going into adolescence and now coming out) I started on BIHR for 10 years and I stopped at 10 bc little did I know that I was growing 3 wonderfully large fibroids on the top of my uterus and two more- one on each side. It’s been a nightmare- adding on the passing of loved ones, Covid and loosing a job. My mind is a complete mess.

  • @01havana
    @01havana หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    I just learned that my frozen shoulder might have been due to menopause!!! Thanks to some recent surge in articles on the topic I now know that my high cholesterol which took me by surprise is due to menopause as well. Women need to swap notes on this topic more freely, and help each other out.

  • @Aliciaskinsecret
    @Aliciaskinsecret หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I never got hot flashes or the typical symptoms. I tried biological hormone pills and if they didn’t work, I could just stop. I’m 43 and they have helped me a-lot in the two months I’ve been on them. I don’t eat foods with preservatives I barely eat out and I do not eat fast food.. and low alcohol consumption. We all pick different journeys, but I had breast implants. I fully removed them almost a year ago. I can tell you they caused a lot of issues in my body and I’m not sure if all of it will recover or not. I’ve also been exposed to mold multiple times and I’m very sensitive to it. Lots of things can disrupt your hormones. I don’t know if taking hormone replacement can work for somebody if they’re living in mold though. Most likely it would be better to have it than not but a lot of the symptoms they talk about are similar to if you have mold in your home or work (or even breast implants or root canals)

  • @nancyross2897
    @nancyross2897 23 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    I’m a 60 year old female , at age 57 my cholesterol skyrocketed to 7.4 for no reason and I had chronic joint pain and my BP also skyrocketed.My physician put me on a cholesterol pill and two blood pressure pills, I had very bad side effects from these pills. This year I sought out a physician that practiced women’s health. I started hormone therapy and within 12 weeks my cholesterol dropped to 4.3 and I came off one of my two blood pressure pills.

    • @anne-louisegoldie
      @anne-louisegoldie 22 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      Yes, it's really shocking that there's no hesitation with the statins and BP meds, but how about addressing the underlying issues, the cliff drop in hormones? Glad you found a doctor who knows what women need 😊xx

  • @jackiesibblis3793
    @jackiesibblis3793 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Thank you Zoe🎉🎉🎉

  • @asr9217
    @asr9217 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Brilliant video ... for those not used to weighted vests or have back problems 5% bodyweight maybe easier and build up to 10%

  • @user-nz8jx6bx1g
    @user-nz8jx6bx1g หลายเดือนก่อน +15

    My blood pressure went through the roof a few months into starting the combi patches and I felt constantly tired and low in mood. The only positive was a reduction in hot flashes. I would say it was a total disaster, and only after discontinuing the patches did I feel like myself again. This is something rarely talked about on these shows: many women react badly to progesterone, cannot process it, and it actually makes their symptoms worse.

    • @hopegood9839
      @hopegood9839 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Were you advised you could have the coil and then have oestrogen only patches or gel?

    • @kathy4180
      @kathy4180 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Agreed. Felt dreadful and tried variations. The pendulum will swing the other way in a couple of years.

    • @veronicaroberts-williams3878
      @veronicaroberts-williams3878 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Was it bio-identical progesterone.
      Probably make a difference

    • @WendySalima
      @WendySalima หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Truth! Wild yam cream helps so much more than ingesting progesterone for me. Pill or birth control made my moods absolutely nuts.

    • @jt8142
      @jt8142 8 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      Oral Micronized Progesterone and Transdermal Estradiol work wonders for me at 60 yrs old (and menopausal 10+ years)

  • @lisettef7947
    @lisettef7947 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I noticed that if I eat red meat and/or lots of dairy, that's an instant trigger for sleeplessness and hot flashes. I now only eat them on occasion. I try to stay away from food that my body struggles to digest.

  • @sue3519
    @sue3519 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    my IBS got worse with peri menopause. i am now more cautious about sugar coffee and junk foods.

  • @amypatterson-bocchi2514
    @amypatterson-bocchi2514 2 วันที่ผ่านมา

    This is fabulous. In a year’s time can you also include Dr Lisa Mosconi on your panel?

  • @janeravesi4326
    @janeravesi4326 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I enjoyed this podcast but I really would like more specific information about diet...just saying fibre is not enough. What does 25g equal etc
    Are you coming to Australia???

  • @Pamel6806
    @Pamel6806 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    That was amazing.

  • @jimhollyjarrad2221
    @jimhollyjarrad2221 29 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Would be interested to know about menopause and PCOS as well as there seems to be little research done. Symptoms are very similar in PCOS to menopause.

  • @llprice2000
    @llprice2000 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I had a frozen shoulder that came on quickly. A physical therapist gave me a pain prescription and a set of exercises to do at home after the first episode. It was able to beat it down in about a month. I kept the exercise instructions and tools to stop the second shoulder from seizing up once it started there.

    • @zwiersae
      @zwiersae 17 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Can you describe what kind of excercises you did?

  • @Lexulous123
    @Lexulous123 8 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Thanks for this! My mum’s going through menopause now, but is adamant against HRT. She thinks it’s going to give her cancer. I’ve been trying a few natural remedies to help and a couple of things that worked well are standardized hot-water Tongkat Ali root extract and some occasional ashwagandha. She takes the Tongkat Ali daily and it appears to be helping with her joint pain and hot flashes a lot. On it she seems more mobile and active too, which is amazing cause she’s been feeling super fatigued since the big M hit. She uses the ashwagandha when she’s feeling stressed or low and I think that’s helped a lot too.

    • @jt8142
      @jt8142 8 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Estrogen does not cause cancer. Buy Dr Haver’s book, “The New Menopause” for the latest info on this topic, and share it with your mum. 😊

  • @the_dog_goddess
    @the_dog_goddess 26 วันที่ผ่านมา

    So, as a woman, now in POST menopausal status and like you said having NO 'Heads Up,'
    "Hey this is what is Going to Happen to you and this is What you can DO now to make it easier" ... like most every woman I have talked to- especially in the past 20 years, I now KNOW what I CAN DO, what should have happened, what types of medical providers to look for and what NOT to, things that happen with Medical/health insurance, etc. I would like to HELP with this Menopause Education on a LARGE Scale effort and want to know, besides just talking about it when or if it comes up in conversation- HOW can I actually Help on a Larger scale?
    I see all of a sudden a rise in people 'saying/claiming' to BE menopause experts or coaches and charging for 'so called certifications on Menopause', but with all I've read and heard in person like at your Book Signings, educational talks, etc., How is this even possible? Only 4% of the Female Population is even on HRT/MRT or even KNOW about it, and Western Medicine Doctors have less than 5 HOURS of Education on the Subject of Menopause, how is it possible that people are saying they can 'certify' you as a Certified Menopause Coach or Counselor, etc.? How are 'they' even qualified to do so?..... I want to help and on a large scale because our FUTURE Generations NEED TO KNOW what they should expect for this entire rest of their lives. I had NO idea even though I am very well educated, well read, well travelled, intelligent, articulate, lead a healthy active athletic holistic lifestyle, etc. I was completely Blindsided. -
    I want to help but I don't want to be someone with fake qualifications like buying one of these so called Menopause Coach courses. If youre NOT a Medical Practitioner with a Medical Degree or Certification, how do we women who want to help on a large scale help you share this all important message on Menopause?

  • @roberte1962
    @roberte1962 หลายเดือนก่อน +23

    No mention of depression in peri meno & post menopause. Nor the role of Testosterone in women’s health & wellbeing. Please cover all bases.

    • @cuaya73
      @cuaya73 19 วันที่ผ่านมา

      😊

    • @cuaya73
      @cuaya73 19 วันที่ผ่านมา

      😊

    • @cuaya73
      @cuaya73 19 วันที่ผ่านมา

      😊😊😊

    • @cuaya73
      @cuaya73 19 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊

    • @cuaya73
      @cuaya73 19 วันที่ผ่านมา

      😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊

  • @asr9217
    @asr9217 27 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Fantastic video ....If you are newbie to weighted vest perhaps start lower than 10% body weight and work up to it unless you are used to lifting weights.

  • @earthcarmusic
    @earthcarmusic 17 วันที่ผ่านมา

    You mention LDL as bad cholesterol. Do you distinguish between normal "buoyant" LDL and small-dense LDL? Maybe you discussed it in another episode - is there a good paper on this?

  • @hazeldellis
    @hazeldellis หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Yes i had tinnitus, until i started hrt and it disappeared! Now battling against muscle loss, so have added testosterone to the mix, so far i feel a difference in energy levels, and brain fog is reducing finally. So i really feel that we need ALL hormones to try to rebalance

    • @myviews2u772
      @myviews2u772 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Were you prescribed testosterone? Which country are you from? Thanks.

    • @hazeldellis
      @hazeldellis 19 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      I'm in Spain , Europe. My private HRT doctor, who is British (I am British) told me to buy testosterone over the counter in the pharmacy in Spain, due to muscle loss issues. With doing weights it seems to be working

  • @marinastepanovic
    @marinastepanovic 13 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    She is so goooood❤

  • @user-kw8uo6mg2t
    @user-kw8uo6mg2t 19 วันที่ผ่านมา

    The Women's Health Initiative also did not differentiate between the effect of Premarin (conjugated from mare urine) vs. Estradiol (bioidentical).

  • @gad6347
    @gad6347 27 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Yes, I suffer from frozen shoulder. I'm on HRT. I tried physical therapy but still suffering from frozen shoulder.

  • @sylviaburnside8226
    @sylviaburnside8226 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Brilliant podcast. Would love to know if omega 7 sea buckthorn helps mitigate dryness and also ‘sticky’ blood

    • @jacquelinearcher1158
      @jacquelinearcher1158 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Check out “A Vogel “ Eileen Talks Menopause she covers so much more in her weekly videos on it ,I’m sure she’s mentioned this .

  • @dinasalazar1552
    @dinasalazar1552 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I m 58 after 8 years in menopause ; I just saw a Dr she prescribed Estradiol 10 MCG vaginal once a day for 14 days then one tablet twice a week ; also Tolterodine Tartrate 1MG tablets - Why I m getting mild colics like menstruation pain after taking these? It has been 8 days: my husband said to wait .

  • @princesscharlott1983
    @princesscharlott1983 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Sorry to ask - I’m 41 have past 5/6 months I just feel hot all the time. Never used to feel like this, used to always be cold. Now I can’t get down to a t shirt quick enough. I hear about hot flashes/flushes - has anyone ever had feeling of almost always being too hot all the time? Thank you x I seem to get no clarity from the GP why I am feeling the way I do with the changes I am feeling

  • @janohara6995
    @janohara6995 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I still have hot flushes after 20 years. Even after starting HRT two years ago I had respite but they have gradually returned.
    I also had frozen shoulder in peri menopause - didn't realis the connection until this podcast. Interestingly I had another episode of frozen shoulder when I started the HRT again did not realise the connection

  • @VeganFriendlyNutritionist
    @VeganFriendlyNutritionist หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Fantastic content and guests. Great questions and info. Thank you for caring so much as a male host Jonathan.

  • @missyjackson6731
    @missyjackson6731 21 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    What are your thoughts on carnivore diet/way of life?

  • @afterbabel
    @afterbabel หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    can periodic skin rashes be a symptom of perimenopause?

  • @Beclee1211
    @Beclee1211 13 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    I’m curious if anyone has ever experienced perimenopause symptoms that mimicked pregnancy symptoms (all the symptoms!) including no period following pretty regular cycle, and along with a rise in beta hcg level (and not been pregnant)?

  • @SallyBurton-dv3wn
    @SallyBurton-dv3wn หลายเดือนก่อน

    Has anyone looked at the Hadza women? How are they experiencing menopause? What can we learn from them?

  • @Sarah-hh2mn
    @Sarah-hh2mn 6 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Since I been in menopause I have had 3 anaphylaxis reactions to foods have eaten all my life. Had one today also and I'm guessing peanuts
    Could this be related to hormone changes

  • @oskarjohn
    @oskarjohn หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    It would be useful to have transparency around payment to US MDs in terms of income/licen to practice as MD/money from big pharma by prescribing HRT and also greater transparency around associated risks of cancer of the breast and womb.

  • @flower7022
    @flower7022 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Thanks for this information! . I would have liked to know a little more about the negatives of using estrogen. My doctor just said hang in there and don't take any estrogen it causes cancer. Also would the part that briefly mention vibration and weighted vests for bone health. Was that a vibration plate? 😊

    • @jt8142
      @jt8142 8 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Your doctor is wrong. Estrogen does not cause cancer. Buy Dr Haver’s book, “The New Menopause” for the latest info on this topic

  • @dawnmorants4180
    @dawnmorants4180 หลายเดือนก่อน

    My dad referred to it as “the change” when my mom went through Menopause!

  • @lindiloots
    @lindiloots วันที่ผ่านมา

    12:55 I’ve been on HRT for 10 years. I tried to stop taking HRT for one month, but the hot flashes and insomnia came back almost immediately. My doctor advised to try taking HRT every second day, as HRT should not be taken for longer than 10 years. Is this true? What about the symptoms? I am 58 years old

  • @m.taylor
    @m.taylor 22 วันที่ผ่านมา

    If a person already has osteoporosis, is it safe to wear a weighted vest?

  • @user-ih8yb8lc9s
    @user-ih8yb8lc9s 27 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    I’m 63 and too go to a Urologist too get estrogen & progesterone
    I have severe osteoarthritis in my
    Hip I been asking for HTR no doctor would help me they all said the same thing you’re already in menopause you don’t need it my
    Health declined from 55 too 63
    And I eat a clean diet I still got osteoarthritis I went 2 years with no diagnosis from my groin pain until finally when I went too a surgeon I don’t want a hip replacement that’s not going too solve the root cause ,,, in 1 week of HRT I’m doing better❤
    Women have been lied too for over 20 years ,,,, recent study shows and has been redacted
    10 million women on HRT had less dieseses

  • @anned6913
    @anned6913 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    When I hear things like 70% of people show improvement after following such and such guidelines, I agree that this should be celebrated. But I always think of the 30% who had no improvement. What becomes of them ?

  • @mellD.7988
    @mellD.7988 25 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Here 6y of chaotic arythmia, especially after eating high carbs but mostly all day, many trips to A&E, tiredness for no apparent reason, forgetfulness, and all the psychological consequences. NO hot flush. NO idea of doctors why all these symptoms, and when they tell you it cannot be perimenopause because it doesn't have typical symptoms, you go crazy (and go again to A&E fearing you have a heart attack). Medical training is sooo behind, I lost trust completely.

  • @sue3519
    @sue3519 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    when i was young i suffered from hormonal imbalance and gynocologiests always wanted to get me to get pregnant now that i am menopausal no one wants to help me with the symptoms. they say: live with it! Thank god i found help from outside my country with an HRT clinic. They should have helped me with my hormones instead of forcing me to get pregnant 😡 something that never materialised

  • @RoseMarinho-dg4qx
    @RoseMarinho-dg4qx 3 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

    Why doesn’t anyone talk about the side effects of taking hrt when you start it. Like the weight gain or headaches and nausea , breast pain . How long before all that passes before you actually feel good.

  • @bolorjamsran8892
    @bolorjamsran8892 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    A very informative video thanks, I am having a joint paint during my menopause and I am having HRT. The symptom is not getting better with the HRT. Unfortunately, the frozen shoulder was only discussed

    • @hopegood9839
      @hopegood9839 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Perhaps you need a higher dose of

    • @kathy4180
      @kathy4180 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      That’s interesting- I think it has limited benefits for some people

  • @chantaldewit4998
    @chantaldewit4998 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Hello, I recently joined the Zoe programme. Can’t really say that it is working for me. I am 50 and has a partial hysterectomy at age 30, I had an ultrasound 1.5 years ago and it showed my overies shrunk away and could start with HRT. Was given estrodial gel but I got terrible acne and water retention. I also suffer from a underactive thyroid my Endocrinologist has schande the estridial gel to a patch. First he gave me a combination estrogen/progesterone, which seem to have been much better for me. But my GP change it to Estrogen 50 (apparently you should t take progesterone when you had a hysterectomy). The ache come back and then the patch dosage was lowered to .25. Can’t say this made any difference.. besides the ulcer acne, I struggle to sleep or stay asleep. I am gaining weight and just feel very low. My blood tests shows my thyroid levels are normal on my current thyroxine dosage. I also have a herniated lumber disc, facet joined cyst and stenosis. I get groin and hip pain and the MRI shows lambrum tear. I don’t know what to do, do zo go back on the higher patch for bone prevention and does it really make such a huge difference to take a combination estrogen/progesterone patch when you had a partial hysterectomy but it works better? And then the other question could something else cause the acne besides the patch? My endocrinologist said just accept things as they are forget about getting your weight on track you are an aging woman …

    • @jt8142
      @jt8142 8 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      I have Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis and am doing great on oral Micronized Progesterone and Transdermal Estradiol patch, along with oral Levothyroxine. My thyroid and menopausal symptoms are very well managed with these medications.

    • @jt8142
      @jt8142 8 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      By the way, you can take Progesterone if you have no uterus as it may help with sleep issues and irritability. But it’s not required as you’re not at risk for uterine cancer, post-hysterectomy, which is why it’s prescribed for women who still have their uterus and want to take estrogen.