Hormone replacement therapy is medication that contains female hormones. Medication to replace the oestrogen that our body stops making during menopause. Hormone therapy is most often used to treat common menopausal symptoms, including hot flashes and vaginal discomfort. Hormone therapy has also been proved to prevent bone loss and reduce fracture in postmenopausal women.
Oestrogen is taken alone. Doctors most often prescribe a low dose of oestrogen to be taken as a pill or patch every day. Oestrogen may also be prescribed as a cream, vaginal ring, gel or spray. You should take the lowest dose of oestrogen needed to relieve menopause symptoms and/or to prevent osteoporosis.
Also called combination therapy, this form of HT combines doses of oestrogen and progesterone (or progestin, a synthetic form of progesterone). In Combination EPT Pills and patches are used.
Hormone replacement therapy primarily focuses on replacing the oestrogen that your body no longer makes after menopause. There are two main types of estrogen therapy:
In the largest clinical trial to date, hormone replacement therapy that consisted of an oestrogen progestin pill (Prempro) increased the risk of certain serious conditions, including:
Subsequent studies have suggested that these risks vary depending on:
Women who begin hormone therapy at age 60 or older or more than 10 years from the onset of menopause are at greater risk of the above conditions.
The risks of hormone therapy vary depending on whether oestrogen is given alone or with progestin, and on the dose and type of estrogen.
Your family history and your personal medical history and risk of cancer, heart disease, stroke, blood clots, liver disease and osteoporosis are important factors in determining whether hormone replacement therapy is appropriate for you.
You may be able to manage menopausal hot flashes with healthy-lifestyle approaches such as keeping cool, limiting caffeinated beverages and alcohol, and practicing paced relaxed breathing or other relaxation techniques. There are also several nonhormone prescription medications that may help relieve hot flashes.
Hormone therapy, specifically oestrogen therapy, has been studied for its potential benefits in cognitive regeneration after menopause. Here are some ways in which hormone therapy may have positive effects on cognitive function:
Oestrogen has been shown to play a role in memory and attention processes. Hormone therapy, particularly when initiated early after menopause, may help improve memory and attention span in some women.
Oestrogen promotes the growth and survival of neurons, enhances synaptic connectivity, and improves cerebral blood flow.
Hormone therapy, especially when started closer to the onset of menopause, may help reduce the risk of cognitive decline and dementia later in life.
Have moderate to severe hot flashes. Systemic oestrogen therapy remains the most effective treatment for the relief of troublesome menopausal hot flashes and night sweats.
Oestrogen can ease vaginal symptoms of menopause, such as dryness, itching, burning and discomfort with intercourse. Systemic oestrogen helps protect against the bone-thinning disease called osteoporosis.
Oestrogen therapy can help decrease your risk of certain health conditions, including osteoporosis, heart disease, stroke, dementia and mood changes.
Vesta’s Words
“Lisa Borcome” a neuroscientist PHD graduated from Harvard and that had brought up an interesting and controversial studies on the benefits of “HORMONE THERAPY” and its link to the cognitive degeneration that awaits many of us in the aging process.