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Menopause and the HRT Dilemma:
Chinese Medicine Responds
Recent developments in hormone replacement
therapy (HRT) have doctors and patients once again reassessing
their treatment strategies. In July 2002 a HRT study
of 16,000 patients (the Women’s Health Initiative)
was halted due to findings that the health risks of
a widely used hormone regimen were too high.
For decades, women have been told
that the symptoms of menopause — hot flashes,
night sweats, decreased libido and vaginal dryness making
sex a painful ordeal — were burdens they should
not have to bear. With hormone therapy, they would feel
like the clock was quickly turned back. At the same
time, they could protect themselves against osteoporosis,
and even reduce their risk of heart attacks, strokes,
colon cancer and bone fractures.
Accumulating data, however, indicated
that even though hormone therapy can reduce cholesterol
levels, women who took Prempro, a combination of estrogens
and progestins, had increased incidences of heart attacks,
strokes and blood clots. They also had more breast cancer.
These risks exceeded the regimen’s benefits. The
unsettling news finds many women looking at alternatives
to managing their symptoms.
What exactly is menopause?
Menopause indicates the complete or
permanent cessation of menstruation, usually for at
least 6-12 months. Climacteric or peri-menopause refers
to the transitional phase from the reproductive to the
non-reproductive stage, a period of declining ovarian
function and depletion of a woman’s follicles.
This period can last from two to more than ten years,
and the median age of menopause in industrialized countries
is about 51. Of interest is that at the time that ovaries
are formed in the fetus, there are six million primordial
follicles each of which holds an egg (ovum). This number
decreases to about 600,000 at birth, 300,000 at puberty
to 10,000 at menopause. This suggests that menopause
is not a sudden event but is a gradual physiological
process that may be influenced by one’s lifestyle
and habits.
With follicular depletion comes a
decline in estrogen; and with cessation of ovulation
comes a lack of progesterone. These are the two primary
hormones given to women treated with HRT to treat the
various symptoms associated with menopause.
How can Chinese medicine help?
First and foremost, Chinese medicine
does not treat menopause as a disease. It is a normal
physiological change in a woman’s life. Unfortunately,
many women suffer discomfort through this transition,
some quite severely. They are all too familiar with
hot flashes and night sweats. But menopause can also
bring on bouts of depression, anxiety, emotional stress,
irritability, fatigue, palpitations, insomnia, menstrual
irregularities, vaginal dryness and itching, decreased
libido, osteoporosis, headaches, poor concentration
and more.
There is a long history of Chinese
medicine studying and successfully treating menopausal
syndromes dating back to at least 100 BC with the publication
of The Yellow Emperor’s Classic of Internal Medicine.
With Chinese medicine a practitioner uses acupuncture
and herbs to nourish the liver and kidney systems (said
in Chinese medicine to govern develop-mental and aging
processes). We also seek to boost the Qi (energy), moisten
the tissues, strengthen and regulate the organs, and
nurture the spirit of the heart. These areas are often
found to be at the root of menopausal imbalances, from
which symptoms originate.
Practitioners also typically advise
patients on diet, exercise and lifestyle. We treat the
whole person, moving toward balance in every aspect
of the woman’s life.
Thus, in Chinese medicine, menopause
is seen as a true change for a woman - rather than a
pathological condition - from mother of her biological
children to mother of her community. This is why, in
traditional cultures, post-menopausal women are regarded
as wise women. Their heart spirit is now nourished in
new ways it was not before.
While HRT has its place — offering
quick results in treating many of the symptoms –
it clearly has its risks. Taking all the above factors
into account, Chinese medicine, with its gentle and
steady approach without side effects, can offer a safe,
effective and logical alternative and/or complement
to HRT.
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| Proverbs |
With
time and patience the mulberry leaf becomes a
silk gown.
- Chinese Proverb
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