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ExcelFemale
HRT in Women
Wife's Hormone Panel (any insight appreciated)
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<blockquote data-quote="Dr Justin Saya MD" data-source="post: 105787" data-attributes="member: 12687"><p>High rT3 in comparison to FT3 (especially if any hypothyroid symptoms: low body temps/cold intolerance, fatigue, easy weight gain or difficulty losing weight with calorie restriction, etc). </p><p></p><p>Some E2 dominance (high E2 relative to progesterone). This can occur naturally during a menstrual cycle, though as you state she has stopped having menstrual cycle (which is an indicator of a problem in it’s own right - indicating suppression of ovarian hormones). E2 dominance can cause PMS symptoms (irritability, mood swings, breast tenderness, bloating, etc). </p><p></p><p>Testosterone certainly has room for improvement especially if libido/arousal is lacking, poor anabolism, etc. </p><p></p><p>I’ve said several times on the forum, HORMONAL birth control (she is probably on Mirena IUD, which is hormonal) suppresses a woman’s sex hormone production over time (again a clue is cessation of menses). A non-hormonal option (such as Paragard IUD, for example) is preferred in my opinion.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Dr Justin Saya MD, post: 105787, member: 12687"] High rT3 in comparison to FT3 (especially if any hypothyroid symptoms: low body temps/cold intolerance, fatigue, easy weight gain or difficulty losing weight with calorie restriction, etc). Some E2 dominance (high E2 relative to progesterone). This can occur naturally during a menstrual cycle, though as you state she has stopped having menstrual cycle (which is an indicator of a problem in it’s own right - indicating suppression of ovarian hormones). E2 dominance can cause PMS symptoms (irritability, mood swings, breast tenderness, bloating, etc). Testosterone certainly has room for improvement especially if libido/arousal is lacking, poor anabolism, etc. I’ve said several times on the forum, HORMONAL birth control (she is probably on Mirena IUD, which is hormonal) suppresses a woman’s sex hormone production over time (again a clue is cessation of menses). A non-hormonal option (such as Paragard IUD, for example) is preferred in my opinion. [/QUOTE]
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ExcelFemale
HRT in Women
Wife's Hormone Panel (any insight appreciated)
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