Virginia Hopkins Health Watch

Hysterectomy and Natural Hormones - PF

hysterectomyhormonesFrom the Hopkins Health Watch Q&As

DOES A WOMAN WITHOUT A UTERUS NEED PROGESTERONE?

Q: My question is why do all the M.D.s that I have seen since my total hysterectomy say “No” to progesterone since I do not have a uterus and if I used it, it is a cause of breast cancer? With or without a uterus and ovaries, medically does a woman need to supplement progesterone and even some testosterone?

A: As so frequently happens, the M.D.s you are seeing are confused about the difference between the synthetic progestins such as Provera, and natural or bioidentical progesterone. They are not the same thing. You’ll find an entire chapter on the subject in What Your Doctor May Not Tell You about Menopause. In short, progestins contribute to breast cancer, strokes, heart attacks, backaches, mood swings, and much more. Progesterone does not.

Progestins were created by scientists in a laboratory. They don’t exist in nature. This is confusing to your body. If your doctors insist that progestins and progesterone are the same, ask them why progesterone levels in a blood test don’t increase when you take progestins? Or why progestins aren’t used in fertility treatments? Or why progestins cause birth defects yet progesterone is the major hormone of pregnancy?

As to why your doctor doesn’t understand this, here’s a very short history of HRT in the U.S., starting in the mid 1960s:










Doctors do not like being told that they are confused, but do you understand now just how confused they really are? They need to study their endocrinology textbooks and re-educate themselves about hormones. As long as drug companies are educating our doctors, we will be stuck in a dark age of medicine where profit rules and confusion reigns.

After a hysterectomy women not on HRT have twice the risk of dying from heart disease, brain disease and bone disease. It’s not just a lack of estrogen that creates the increased risk, it’s also lack of progesterone and testosterone. Hormones really do help!

After a hysterectomy women not on HRT have twice the risk of dying from heart disease, brain disease and bone disease. It’s not just a lack of estrogen that creates the increased risk, it’s also lack of progesterone and testosterone. Hormones really do help!

After a hysterectomy, women on conventional HRT have an increased risk of cancer and strokes, thanks to the progestins and excessively high doses of estrogen.

According to two large European studies, women with or without a hysterectomy who use bioidentical hormones (e.g. estradiol and progesterone) have no increased risk of any disease.

If you want details on exactly how and why estrogen, progesterone and testosterone can help a woman feel better and live longer, please read What Your Doctor May Not Tell You about Menopause.