HGH Hormones and Hair
CONTENTS
- Male pattern baldness: is that like Alzheimers? Hormonal and
vascular mysteries of hair growth and hair loss
- Demodex: the real culprit?
- Is a bald spot a biomarker for prostate cancer risk?
- European use of progesterone cream to arrest androgenic hair loss
- Are bald men sexier? Dr. Peter Proctor helps slay another myth
- Zinc, copper and hair color
- Attitudes toward menopause: denial or relief?
- Networking in progress: seeking a Brazilian M.D.
- Feeding the roots
- "My lips are sealed": a discreet lip-developing exercise
- Care of the soul: More about Eve
MALE PATTERN BALDNESS: IS THAT LIKE ALZHEIMERS?
HORMONAL AND VASCULAR MYSTERIES OF HAIR
Well, there is at least one factor that androgenic baldness and
Alzheimers disease have in common: atherosclerosis. The lining of
blood vessels produces nitric oxide (NO, as in MiNOxidol, the active
ingredient in Rogaine) and possibly other hair growth factors; when this
lining is damaged through the accumulation of atherosclerotic plaque,
less nitric oxide (NO) is produced.
Please dont draw the wrong conclusion that a balding man is doomed
to go on to Alzheimers disease or Parkinsons. Like most men,
hell probably die of heart disease, which is a much better way to
die. Also, 40% of men die before their 75th birthday, which
also helps account for the lower rate of brain disease in the male
population. Still, what happens in the scalp of a balding person
(including inflammation and free-radical damage) does seem to bear
resemblance to what probably goes on in the brain tissue of
brain-disease victims.
The incidence of male pattern (androgenic) baldness has been found to
be the highest among college professors, and lowest among skid-row
winos. Winos are also known to have the cleanest arteries in the world
(which of course doesnt save them from dying of cirrhosis of the
liver). Could there be a connection? Let me remind you that alcohol is
an excellent vasodilator -- there is perhaps nothing quite like alcohol
for dilating those peripheral blood vessels. And vasodilatation implies
nitric oxide release. (Im not recommending that anyone take up
drinking. For years now Ive been haunted by the question of whether
its possible to duplicate the benefits of alcohol in a non-alcoholic
way, which would be vastly preferable. For women, estrogens seem to do
something very similar, but what about men?)
For unknown reasons, androgenic baldness is more common among blond
men than dark-haired men and among Caucasians than among other races.
First of all, however, we need to address the most obvious question: why
is baldness so prevalent among men, and relatively rare among women,
especially premenopausal women?
We need to look here at how hormones affect hair. Estrogens promote
the growth of scalp hair, while they inhibit the growth of hair
elsewhere on the body; DHT, the strong form of testosterone, promotes
the growth of body hair, facial hair, butit appears to inhibit the
growth of scalp hair. The amount of DHT produced in the skin in turn
depends on the amount of the enzyme 5-alpha-reductase available for the
conversion of testosterone to DHT. Men with congenital deficiency of
5-alpha-reductase have small prostates, do not develop prostate cancer
(no case has ever been reported), have little body hair, and do not grow
bald.
Women often notice increased hair loss when there is a sudden drop in
estrogens: post-partum, after stopping the Pill, and at the onset of
menopause. It is estimated that a woman may lose as much as 20% of her
hair at menopause. Both post-partum and menopausal hair loss, however,
are not classified as androgenic alopecia, but as "endocrine
alopecia," which should really be called "estrogen-withdrawal
alopecia."
Severely hyperandrogenic women, on the other hand, can suffer from
male pattern baldness even at a young age. Still, a woman can be
hyperandrogenic without necessarily showing signs of androgenic alopecia,
but she may have acne and increased facial and body hair. Or a woman can
have androgenic alopecia without acne and/or hirsutism. This seems to be
a highly individual matter.
Typically, however, it is men who start losing hair fairly early in
life, sometimes already in their twenties. Men produce a lot more DHT
than women do, since obviously men produce a lot more testosterone than
women do (DHEA can also serve as a raw material for DHT). But its not
the serum level of DHT that seems to matter, but the local conversion of
androgens to DHT in the scalp.
Let me stress this point: it is the LOCAL excess DHT production that
seems
to be the root of the problem. THE SCALP FOLLICLES OF GENETICALLY
SUSCEPTIBLE INDIVIDUALS HAVE MORE OF THE ENZYME 5-ALPHA-REDUCTASE,
RESPONSIBLE FOR THE CONVERSION OF TESTOSTERONE TO DHT. Most women are
protected by having (1) less testosterone, (2) less 5-alpha-reductase
needed to convert T to DHT, and also (3) by having more aromatase, the
enzyme that converts testosterone to estradiol.
It is interesting to note that male teenagers and young men, with
their tremendously high testosterone output (T production begins to
decline very gradually after the age of 25) tend to have a full head of
hair but generally not that much chest hair and facial hair. On the
other hand, its not unusual to see lots of chest hair and a full
flowing beard on a severely balding middle-aged man. Apparently the
local production of DHT, perhaps as compensation for low serum
androgens, is a significant factor here. We do not yet understand how
serum DHT and peripheral DHT are related, but one hypothesis is that
there is an inverse relationship. Its just a hypothesis. Estrogens
are vasodilators: they promote the release of NO from the blood vessel
lining. Its also possible that estrogens increase superoxide
dismutase (SOD) activity (at least thats one of the effects of the
birth-control pill). SOD quenches the superoxide radical, a very nasty
little beastie that apparently inhibits NO release.
DHT acts in a more perfidious way. Here is one emerging view of it:
DHT seems to induce class-II antigens within the follicle. The immune
system then perceives the follicle as a "foreign body," and
targets it for destruction. Progesterone inhibits 5-alpha-reductase, and
it can compete with other androgens for androgen receptors (progesterone
could be classified as a "non-masculinizing androgen").
Topical progesterone can thus arrest the progression of baldness, but it
doesnt promote regrowth. I repeat: there is no evidence that
progesterone promotes regrowth. Just decreasing DHT in the scalp can at
best arrest the progression of baldness. Proscar (finasteride) also
decreases DHT by inhibiting 5-alpha-reductase. Proscar produces close to
70% reduction in serum DHT, but only about 34% reduction in skin DHT.
Still, virtually all men taking Proscar (5 mg finasteride) report that
the progression of baldness is arrested. But is a big reduction of serum
DHT beneficial, or can it in fact be harmful? (Hint: DHT cant be
aromatized to estradiol, and estradiol has been implicated in prostate
cancer. We discuss it later in this issuesee the comment by Dr. Zava.)
CORTISOL and cortisone, the so-called "stress hormones,"
are also androgens and are possibly implicated in baldness. We know for
sure that they are involved in acne. Anecdotally, stress is known to
cause hair loss. One study (Schmidt 1994) did find SIGNIFICANTLY
ELEVATED CORTISOL IN ANDROGENIC ALOPECIANS, BOTH MALE AND FEMALE, as
compared with controls. It also found alopecians to have significantly
elevated androstenedione. In women there was also very frequent
hypothyroidism and/or elevated prolactin (its possible that prolactin
stimulates the production of androgens). Balding men, on the other hand,
had higher serum estradiol than controls.
Schmidt makes a very big point of the finding that women suffering
from androgenic alopecia do not necessarily have higher serum androgens
(other than cortisol, generally not classified as an androgen, though it
should be). She thinks that THE MAIN HORMONAL DISTURBANCE LINKED TO
FEMALE ALOPECIA IS HYPOTHYROIDISM. Its likely that hypothyroidism
leads to abnormalities in both estrogen and androgen metabolism. Im
amazed that this study didnt look at insulin, since elevated insulin
has been linked to alopecia in hyperandrogenic women. Anecdotally,
lowering insulin with drugs and/or diet does seem to improve hair growth
in both men and women.
As you can see, the situation gets more and more complicated the more
hormones you look at. Finally you just want to throw up your hands and
say, "OK, it looks like all the hormones are out of whack." To
put it more formally, androgenic alopecia is a multi-hormonal disorder.
You cant just say "too much DHT."
Malnutrition and stress can obviously cause hair loss, but it appears
that the primary causes are genetic-hormonal-immunological and vascular
(its not really possible to separate the endocrine system from the
immune system from the nervous system and so forth). In other words, to
preserve our hair, we must keep DHT and cortisol at bay and strive to
preserve clean arteries. But see the mite article below for yet another
complication. On a personal note, I noticed both hair loss and a
distinct deterioration in hair quality during perimenopause.
(Interestingly, my cholesterol suddenly began to soar.) I was beginning
to have nightmares about developing a bald spot (I should have been
having nightmares about getting a heart attack, but you know how its
only human to worry more about appearance than about dying). You can
imagine how thrilled I was to see complete recovery with the use of nhrt
(my cholesterol dropped to 170 also). In fact I am now more bushy-maned
than I had ever been after turning 40 (at least until several days ago,
when my dieting, aspartame-crazed hair-dresser took out her aggression
on my hair).
Of course what is easy for a woman with no special genetic
susceptibility and with access to sufficient doses of female hormones is
not easy for a man, or even for a woman with a genetic susceptibility.
Later in this issue well discuss what can be done.
For the easy cases, that is, women with some typical menopausal hair
loss, here is what you need to remember: estrogens, fish oil, the
flavonoids in red wine, and arginine are NO-releasers, and hence at
least theoretically can stimulate hair growth. The best proven case here
is estrogens. Progesterone inhibits the conversion of testosterone to
DHT, so it is helpful also. Finally, topical NO-releasers are available
in special shampoos. With this hormonal, nutritional, and topical
arsenal, you should be able to regrow and maintain a magnificent head of
hair. Night-night, and dont let the androgens bite.
(Sources: Schmidt JB. Hormonal basis of male and female androgenic
alopecia.
Skin Pharmacol 1994; 7: 61-66; Van Deusen E. What you can do about
baldness. Stein and Day 1978; Jaworsky C, Klingman AM. Characterization
of inflammatory infiltrates in male pattern alopecia: implications for
pathogenesis. Br J Dermatol 1992;127: 239-46; Mercutio M. Androgenic
alopecia in women. Medscape/womens health 12/7/97; Rittmaster R.
5-Alpha-reductase inhibitors. J Androl 1997; 18: 582-87; Proctor P,
alopecia post on the Internet, 1997. An important part of the research
was supplied by Starla Taliaferro.)
IS A MITE THE REAL CULPRIT IN BALDNESS? THE DEMONIC DEMODEX
A scientist at i, a manufacturer of hair-care products (those nice
tingly conditioners), looked at the human scalp through a new hand-held
microscope that can magnify up to 1,000 times. And what did he see?
Mites. Demodex follicularum feasting on the sebum. According to the UPI
dispatch, "as many as a dozen of the mites burrow head-down in
every hair follicle." And by late middle age, we are all infested.
All of us harbor Demodex. But apparently only some of us have the
unlucky genes that cause the body to mount an immune response that ends
up destroying the follicles while the demonic Demodex goes on feasting.
In fact, it is well known that oil-glands enlarge and increase
production as the hair falls outhence the proverbial sheen.
Its not clear how DHT and cortisol fit in with this new discovery.
There is no doubt, however, that steroids profoundly modulate the immune
system. Since Demodex has long been known to cause hair loss in animals,
there is a good reason to take the mite seriously.
The scientists at i are already busy trying to find a way to starve
Demodex by blocking jits ability to digest sebum. The big question
remains:
suppose you do succeed in wiping out the mitewill there still be
androgenic baldness?
My grandmother used to say, "Whoever discovers the cure for
baldness is going to be the richest person in the world." Nioxin
has joined the race. Stay tuned.
(Source: a recent UPI news release on Dr. W. i lecture at the 1998
annual dermatology meeting in Miami; supplied by Starla Taliaferro)
---------------------------
Gail comments:
Re: "by late i age, we are all infested." . . . Well,
thanks a lot for telling me!! Yuck! Although, I will say, Id read
about the mites in our eyelashes (and saw disgusting pix), and perhaps
these are the same?
Ivy:
Yes. Demodex lives anywhere on the body where you find hair. I
suspect that the itching around the rim of the eyelashes is often due to
the irritation caused by this disgusting micro-animal.
The big mystery is how androgens fit into the mite picture.
IS A BALD SPOT A BIOMARKER FOR PROSTATE CANCER RISK?
Both androgenic baldness and prostate trouble involve DHT, so its
plausible to hypothesize that a high degree of baldness might indicate
higher prostate cancer risk. Its so plausible, in fact, that the
authors of the study which found otherwise seem to have a great deal of
trouble accepting their own findings.
The subjects were 315 men between the ages of 50 and 70; 159 had
prostate cancer; 156 served as controls. Their serum androgens were
tested, and the degree and pattern of baldness (frontal vs vertex) were
judged by a panel of judges according to the Hamilton Baldness Scale.
Free testosterone was found to be higher in prostate cancer cases
than in controls (the difference was statistically significant, though
the numbers themselves dont show anything dramatic); it was also
higher in men with frontal baldness and particularly in men with vertex
baldness (the bald spot). And yet: "the data indicate that hair
patterning DID NOT DIFFER between prostate cancer cases and
controls." Neither the degree nor the kind of baldness had any
correlation with prostate cancer. The authors still express hope that a
different experimental design, such as a long prospective study, might
confirm the hypothesis after all. They fail to comment on the most
interesting finding of this study: that DHT/T RATIO WAS HIGHER AMONG
CONTROLS. Yes, thats right: DHT, the "strong testosterone,"
the most macho androgen (5 to 6 times more potent than testosterone),
was higher in relation to testosterone in the serum of healthy men.
Intrigued, I read another study, this one simply investigating serum
androgens of prostate cancer cases vs healthy controls, and lo and
behold, THE HEALTHY MEN HAD HIGHER SERUM DHT. The authors cite a number
of other studies that have also found this inverse correlation of serum
DHT with prostate cancer, and hypothesize that perhaps higher serum DHT
means lower DHT production in the prostate.
There is also a study that shows that a certain body type is a
biomarker for higher prostate cancer risk: a rather tall man with a
poorly developed upper body bones and muscles (the "leptomorphic
build"), the opposite of the top-heavy "male male" with a
broad chest and big upper-body muscles. This also shows a hormonal
influence, but not the sort that used to be expected. (I cant help
noting here a parallel with the pear-shaped "female female"
who is at a lower breast cancer risk than the usually taller, thick-waisted
hyperandrogenic woman.)
Returning to bigger upper-body muscles, even though the study last
cited may point to developmental hormonal and nutritional influences
going back to childhood and early adolescence, we know that exercise at
any age has a significant positive physiological impact and seems to
reduce the risk of a number of cancers. Perhaps the best thing a man can
do for his health is exercise with weights and build up those lats,
delts, pecs, etc. (Bones will thicken automatically too.) More lean body
mass significantly changes metabolism and reduces insulin. Insulin has
been heavily implicated as a growth factor for tumors.
(Sources: Demark-Wahnefried W et al. Serum androgens: association
with prostate cancer risk and hair patterning. J Androl 1997; 18:
495-500;
Signorello L et al. Steroids in relation to prostate cancer risk in a
case-control study (Greece). Cancer Causes and Control 1997;8: 632-36;
Demark-Wahnefried W et al. Anthropometric risk factors for prostate
cancer.
Nutr Cancer 1997; 28: 302-307)
DR. ZAVA COMMENTS ON ANDROGENS AND PROSTATE CANCER
RISK
Dr. David Zava:
Yep, the testosterone/DHT story and prostate cancer is an interesting
one. If you carefully study the literature it reveals the opposite of
what you would expectindividuals with low androgens are at increased
risk for prostate cancer. A new school of thought is now proposing that
prostate cancer is actually caused by estrogens, not androgens. However,
once the tumor is initiated by estrogens, growth is promoted by
androgens, particularly DHT. Preventing conversion of T to DHT with 5
alpha reductase inhibitors would therefore be of benefit to those of us
at high risk of prostate cancer. Guess what blocks 5 alpha reductasesaw
palmetto and progesterone. Progesterone may be very beneficial for men
with prostate cancer for this reasonbut studies need to be done. The
publication by Morgentaler A. (Occult prostate cance in men with low
serum testosterone levels. JAMA 1996; 276: 1904) is quite revealing. Men
with low T had a very high incidence of prostate cancer not clinically
manifest by digital rectal exams or PSA tests. Current thinking by those
I would consider the most innovative is that estradiol initiates the
tumor and estradiol plus DHT (not T) drives the growth of the tumor if
other conditions are right (low zinc and selenium, compromised immune
system, bad fats, etc.).
A group of articles showing that progesterone inhibits the conversion
of T to DHT, and also blocks DHT binding to androgen receptors can be
found in wonderful book published in 1980 -- a must read but hard to
find. (Percutaneous Absorption of Steroids, P. Mauvais -Jarvis, et al.
eds., Academic Press, 1980, pages 81-89, 123-137).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ivy:
Since there are progesterone receptors in the prostate, and since
progesterone appears to inhibit the production and binding of DHT,
its strange that the potentially important protective function of
progesterone in prostate tissue has been so neglected.
As I keep saying about the bone tissue: surely those progesterone
receptors arent there just for decoration?
Men do produce progesterone, and it stands to reason to suppose that
due to aging and stress some men produce an inadequate amount. I know
that the idea of progesterone deficiency in men sounds startling, but
there just might be something to it.
Of course the big degenerative cascade seems to start with
testosterone deficiency. A mans physiological age seems more closely
correlated with free T than with any other biomarker, with the possible
exception of lean body mass.
Obese men show abnormally high serum estradiol, and obesity (high
waist-hip ratio) appears to be a risk factor for prostate cancer; there
may well be a connection.
On the other hand, estrogens shrink the prostate; hence the new
interest in low-dose DES as the cheapest prostate cancer therapy, more
effective than castration. This might catch on with the HMOs, which
currently promote castration as the cheapest prostate cancer therapy.
TRANS-FATS appear to be heavily involved in cancer risk, including
breast cancer, colon cancer, and prostate cancer. Everyone: dont even
think of eating margarine. If its still in your house, toss it. Corn
oil and other commercial vegetable oils belong in the trash right with
margarine. OK, what about commercially baked cookies and other
"goodies"? Sorry, they are loaded with carcinogenic
trans-fats.
A reminder: all men should be taking zinc and selenium, as well as i
supplements if tomatoes are not their favorite food.
My dream is that one day therell be public service billboards
asking:
"Men! Have you eaten a tomato today? Or at least a slice of
pizza?" A note to women: if youd like to have your partner try
progesterone, be assured that it wont hurt him. Its best for a man
to apply or take progesterone (men usually take 100-200 mg) at bedtime
to take advantage of its sleep-promoting properties. (If your mate has
acne, the results of P cream are quick and satisfying; but if you are
trying to arrest baldness, you must be persistent. Remember that
progesterone will not cause hair regrowth.)
EUROPEAN USE OF TOPICAL PROGESTERONE TO ARREST THE PROGRESSION OF
BALDNESS
This is just a quick note on dosage. The cream for anti-baldness use
is generally no more than 5% in potency, and the most you can expect is
stopping the progression of the balding process. Other products need to
be used to obtain regrowth.
If the only cream available is your mates 10% cream, dont
worry. Yes, its OK to use it, and you wont grow breasts or
experience any other feminizing effects.
A mans body normally produces a small amount of progesterone.
Progesterone at any dose is nontoxic for either women and men. It is so
safe that it is the only hormone approved by the FDA for use during
pregnancy.
DR. PROCTOR ON TREATING FACIAL HAIR, AND THE MYTH OF
SEXY BALD MEN
Dr. Peter Proctor is regarded as the foremost authority on treating
alopecia. He holds many patents in the field, and has formulated a
hair-regrowth shampoo that is supposed to be more effective than
Rogaine. The chief active ingredient is NANO: 3-carboxylic acid
pyridine-N-oxide. NANO is known as "natural i." Two stronger
products are available for those with more severe hair loss.
Dr. Proctor has given me permission to quote our recent
correspondence. Ivy: Do you think that topical spironolactone (or any
other topical anti-androgen) might be effective in treating facial
hairat least in decreasing or slowing down the growth?
Dr. Peter Proctor: Yes. It has been used this way. It works some. But
the best thing is to use it systemically, which is done a lot in women.
In fact, this is probably the single major use for the drug. Ivy: How
can one get topical spironolactone?
Dr. Proctor: It has to be formulated and it is very unstable. Ive
been able to stabilize it mostly, but the techniques are proprietary at
the moment. Anyway, women can use the systemic drug.
Ivy: It seems from anecdotal reports that estrogen and progesterone
creams (both OTC and prescription strength) have been rather
disappointing in their results on facial haircould it be a matter of
needing to provide more through high-frequency application (a few times
a day)? Or is it a hopeless battle, i.e. once facial hair sets in due to
increased androgen/estrogen ratio, nothing can stop the growth?
Dr.Proctor: Actually, in women female hormones are best used
systemically, as long as there in no possibility of pregnancy. Also, I
recommend using laser hair removal techniques over electrolysis. They
work pretty well, but may take repeated treatment and lots of power.
Ivy: There is terrific interest in phytoestrogens, especially
genistein from soy. To your knowledge, is there any
nitric-oxide-releasing and/or anti-androgen action here? Since thered
be no feminizing effects from weak estrogens of this sort, they might be
of interest.
Dr. Proctor: Estrogens are thought to protect against heart attack by
enhancing NO (nitric oxide) production. Unfortunately, I dont know
what the ones you describe do.
If ignorance were bliss, etc.(G).
Ivy: Since there seems to be a strong connection between clean
arteries, sexual potency (found to correlate with higher HDLs), and less
baldness (due to more NO release by healthy arteries), the old myth
about bald men being more sexy is, I suppose, the exact opposite of
truth, i.e. in the same age group wed expect the less bald men to
have less atherosclerosis and better potency. Am I reasoning correctly?
Dr. Proctor: You bet...
-------------------------
Ivy: Its interesting to consider one of the factors that hair
growth and potency have in common: nitric oxide (NO) release. The new
potency-increasing drug, Viagra, is a NO releaser. Alternative health
"male power" products generally contain arginine, which
enhances NO production.
Re: facial hair and systemic spironolactone. There is now more
interest in
Propecia. Preliminary trials indicate that it might weaken facial
hair growth without having any side effects.
In regard to phytoestrogens: its been noted that baldness among
Japanese men used to be relatively rare. Now both baldness and prostate
enlargement appear to be on the rise. Could there be a connection with
the departure from the traditional diet containing a substantial amount
of soy products? Soy estrogens appear to protect the prostate, and it
would not surprise me if they had some anti-androgen effect in the scalp
as well. (By the way, it is now possible to take genistein in supplement
form; two tabs of LEFs MegaSoy are supposed to provide 100 mg of
genistein, an amount shown by studies to be able to lower cholesterol
and increase bone density. It would be fascinating to explore what other
effects this dose can have in men and women.)
Ginkgo biloba is also supposed to contain flavonoids (weak estrogenic
compounds) that dilate the small peripheral arteries. Alternative health
publications claim that ginkgo increases potency. So far I havent
encountered reports of improved hair growth with ginkgo, but there is
that theoretical possibility.
On the other hand, ginkgo contains quercetin, which acts as an
aromatase-inhibitor, and might thus lower the conversion of T to E2 -- a
good thing in some circumstances, not so good in others. Believe me,
when you start getting into the details, you quickly find yourself on
the brink of insanityhormonal effects are incredibly complicated and
dose-depedent. Dr. Peter Proctor can be reached at < pproctor@sam.neosoft.com>
Please respect his time and do not go into long details of your hair
loss. The treatment is essentially the same for all, except that more
potent products are used for more severe cases.
You can get more information about Dr. Proctors formulas by
calling the Life Extension Foundation, 800-544-4440.
ATTITUDE TOWARD MENOPAUSE: DENIAL OR RELIEF?
Virginia writes:
I had to put in my 2 cents worth in when I read about menopause and
denial. I had never heard any kind of talk about menopause when I was
growing upor even much laterexcept maybe in a negative sense. But
when I realized it was happening to me, I was relieved. No more periods
and no more worries about getting pregnant. Therefore, no more need to
take birth control pills which made me fat and depressed.
Ivy:
Personally I had both reactions: first denial: "But Im too
young to be menopausal!"; then terrific relief, once it really
registered on me that Id have no more periods and no need for
contraception. And when I had a nightmare that my periods were back,
that really brought the "relief" part into the foreground. I
realized I was born to be postmenopausal. I also love this statement by
Dorothy Canfield: "One of the many things nobody ever tells you
about middle age is that its such a nice change from being
young."
This is not just a cute quotation. Women in their fifties and sixties
have been found to enjoy the best mental health. These are truly the
"power years" for a woman, and with further advancement in
nhrt (for instance, small doses of growth hormone need to be included;
nhrt needs to be started way before menopause), and in our knowledge of
exercise and nutrition, we should be able to include the seventies and
eighties as well. Remember Dr. Julian Whitakers formula for
successful aging: "Maturation, not deterioration."
I truly appreciate what Virginia wrote. I think menopause is a
blessing. For me, it also took good nhrt to make it a blessing, but I
can see how even without it, it is natures great gift to women to
terminate the hormonal yo-yo of the menstrual cycle once and for all
(except that nature didnt design women to be having lots of periods;
women were designed to be pregnant). Of course birth control pills could
be made with natural hormones and they wouldnt have these side
effects, either, but thats another issue. The third-generation Pill,
made with less androgenic progestins, is a lot better. Could it be that
we are moving toward the contraceptive use of progesterone, which is
what Pincus, the pioneer of oral contraception, originally intended?
As an aside, I hope that all CH readers realize that you can enjoy
the benefits of nhrt without having artificially induced periods. All it
takes is adequate doses of progesterone taken every day.
Gail:
If pseudopregnancy is a good thing to shoot for, what about the fact
that even though nature wants women to be pregnant a lot, still one
cant be pregnant all the time . . . there is a gap between
pregnancies, when hormones drop radically.
Ivy:
True, but intense lactation, as still practiced in tribal societies,
also suppresses the menstrual cycle. Thus a woman may eventually get
pregnant again without even having a period first. I guess Im just
against periods and the hormonal yo-yo of the menstrual cycle, with its
attendant endometriosis and increased breast cancer risk. Mark my words:
I predict that medical science will ultimately move toward abolishing
the menstrual cycle for women not desiring reproduction.
As for "natural," all nature wants is maximum reproduction.
After menopause, there is rapid senescence, as reflected in morbidity
and mortality statistics. Its either tough luck, baby, youre
finished (the old maxim in biology: "When reproduction is finished,
the animal is finished"), or else you use your brain and make these
the best years of your life. For a human being, to use those oversize
brains is only natural.
SEEK AND YE SHALL FIND
Kolodie writes:
I have just now found two pharmacies in Vancouver that will compound
testosterone, progesterone and tri-est. For your files if anyone is
looking its Finlandia Pharmacy in Vancouver and Peoples Drug in
Whiterock. As you said, if a woman really wants her hormones working
shell find a source.
Ivy:
Ive seen it again and again: once a woman makes up her mind about
nhrt, pretty soon she has at least progesterone, then tri-est or
Estrace, and before long shes querying me about testosterone cream.
P.S. Its typical of women to write me or tell me things like,
"Id love to get the estriol cream for my face, but I know that
my doctor would never give me more estrogen." NEGATIVE THINKING is
rampant among women. They wont even try.
Remember, when you "think negative," you are sending a
"die" message to your spirit and your body. If you really talk
yourself into believing that you cant get natural hormones, you end
up not only hormone-deficient, but also feeling depressed and powerless;
the biochemistry of despair created by negative thinking then opens the
door to disease. Dont do this to yourself! Thousands and thousands of
women are getting their nhrt prescriptions, and so can you.
If your doctor keeps trying to force Provera on you, remember the
simple
fact: there are other doctors. If you really want to find a doctor
who will
prescribe natural progesterone or estriol or 3-E cream, you will. THE
FIRST STEP IS TO EMPOWER YOURSELF WITH KNOWLEDGE; the second step is
to
remember the ancient wisdom of "seek, and ye shall find."
My mother likes to reinforce this with: "Never give up. Never give
up." Anyway, in these days of Internet networking and hundreds of
thousands women and men already using nhrt, its not as heroic as it
used to be. If you have a "sweetheart" type doctor who wants
you happy but doesnt necessarily have any knowledge of hormones,
please highlight for him/her the part in CH 9 article about NO SYSTEMIC
EFFECTS with the .3% estriol cream. Ive just talked with a doctor who
expressed great interest in the effects of estrogens on the skin. He
believes that plastic surgery shouldnt be performed without adequate
estrogen support.
DARE TO THINK POSITIVE. Dare to ask. "Ask, and it shall be given
to you," right?
But some women would rather complain about horrible doctors than
educate themselves, network, seek, and ask for what they want. You can
put hours, years, decades, your whole lifetime into complaining, or you
can take a few minutes to make a call to a large compounding pharmacy
(WIP at 800-279-5708 is the biggest) and ask for their nhrt information
package. Just take the first baby step, and the rest will follow.
KNOWLEDGE AND NETWORKING EMPOWER WOMEN
Starla writes:
Life experience has led us to coming to the realization that doctors
DONT know it all (like we were taught"do what the doctor
says"), that DRUGS are not a cure and just as often cause a problem
as correct one, and that we have to do our own research and find out
what is really best. Also, its led us to helping other people by
giving them the information they need to make wise decisions.
Ivy:
I want to emphasize Starlas "WE HAVE TO DO OUR OWN RESEARCH
AND FIND OUT
WHAT IS REALLY BEST." And it only makes sense to share that
information with others.
I experienced a moment of enlightenment while watching the movie
"The Little Buddha." I wasnt sure what to do with my
lifewhether to continue with creative writing, take a teaching job,
or maybe write a non-fiction bookand then I heard the statement, soon
after the Buddhas "awakening" under the Bodhi Tree:
"We have the duty to transmit knowledge." I started
CyberHealth in June 1997 with 60 subscribers. Today we have around 310,
but I know the knowledge reaches more people than that. Another group of
women have recently formed an organization called AWARE, and they are
also spreading this type of knowledge. There is no stopping it. If you
are wondering how come most doctors are so far behind, just open any
gynecology or urology textbook. If you really want to scare yourself,
check one thats over 10 years old.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Here is another example of how knowledge and networking empower
women.
Miriam writes:
In a little while I will go to my HMO doctor, to give her one more
chance to double the prescription of Estradiol and Progesterone. If she
doesnt, I have the names of three doctors who may be willing to do
so. Im at the end of my hormonal rope. Ive been trying to work
with my HMO doctor because I have no insurance for other doctors, but
Im not willing to live with such low levels of estrogen.
Ivy:
Having the names of doctors recommended either by a compounding
pharmacy or by other women beats slipping your recalcitrant doctor a
note that reads, "I am out of estrogen, and I have a gun."
I remember how having a name of a doctor willing to prescribe Armour
Thyroid empowered me to be assertive with my HMO doctorand sure
enough, I got my Armour that very day!
NETWORKING IN PROGRESS: SEEKING A BRAZILIAN M.D.
Jorge in Brazil wonders if he can find an MD in Brazil to prescribe
progesterone for his wife (natural progesterone, to be obtained from a
U.S. compounding pharmacy).
An OTC progesterone cream will not do. Jorges wife needs
prescription strength progesterone.
If there is a Brazilian M.D. among CH subscribers, or if anyone else
can
help Jorge, please write to him at his email address: < jomar@mpc.com.br>
I wonder if this is perhaps the type of case where a pharmacist at
WIP,
with their large oversea business, might help. WIP can be reached at
< wip@terracom.net>
COPPER, ZINC, AND HAIR COLOR
Here is something from my personal experience that maybe a CH reader
can corroborate. Ive just had a haircut, and my hairdresser
exclaimed, "Have you done anything to your hair? Its
darker!"
Now, mind you, a hairdresser can tell at a glance if the hair has
been artificially colored because of the unnatural uniformity of the
color. She knew that wasnt it, and was very curious.
One possible explanation that occurs to me is this: I received a
coffee maker for Christmas, at my own request (I read the exciting
reports about polyphenols in freshly brewed coffee, and how coffee
drinkers have the lowest rate of breast cancerthe newest Harvard
Nurses Health Study). And to get even more polyphenols, I started
drinking my one cup of morning coffee as mocha, made with cocoa powder.
How might that result in darker hair? Well, chocolate is a source of
copper, and copper is necessary for the conversion of the aminoacid
tyrosine to the copper-containing enzyme tyrosinase, involved in the
production of melanin by the melanocytes in the scalp.
The production of the enzyme is known to decline with age. Estrogens
are known to increase the absorption of copper, and also to stimulate
the activity of melanocytes. I first noticed that my hair was growing
out darker after I started nhrt.
Its also possible that all the extra polyphenols from coffee and
chocolate have been helping the melanocytes work better.
Ive also added 20 mg of zinc to my supplement regimen. Zinc
likewise is involved in the production of melanin.
The herb ashwaganda is reputed to darken hair, but I have never tried
it. By the way, I know some of you may be wondering if maybe I started
taking PABA, reputed to darken hair. As luck would have it, just when I
started drinking my mocha, my health food store introduced its own
inexpensive brand of PABA, but at only half my previous dose. So my hair
got darker in spite of the much lower dose of PABA (which maybe is the
better dose for me). Thinking back, my hair was lightest in color when I
was both hypoestrogenic (to the point of losing my periods) and
zinc-deficient when I experimented with being a vegetarian.
Of course Im speculating here, but if you notice a definite
lightening in your hair color, it would make sense to consider the
possibility of hormone deficiency or mineral deficiency or both.
Caution: nothing in excess. Too much chocolate means too much oxalic
acid, which could reduce the absorption of calcium and really cause
trouble for individuals prone to kidney stones (the susceptibility
usually runs in the family). And taking excess copper in supplement form
could disturb the copper-zinc balance. One milligram is probably enough,
if you suspect you need a supplement (wouldnt it be wonderful if
doctors tested us for nutritional deficiencies?)
Some holistic experts believe that prematurely gray hair implies
copper deficiency, but to my knowledge there is no proof of that. In
women at least, the causes are more likely hormonal (see the article on
premature graying and osteoporosis; yes, copper is necessary for bone
health). If youve noticed changes in your hair color that seem
related to hormones or nutrition, please write to CyberHealth.
FEEDING THE ROOTS
Eggs, eggs, and more eggs. If you want to have beautiful hair, eggs
are at the top of the list for promoting hair growth and hair quality.
Eggs contain just about every known nutrient required for good hair
production. If youve ever visited a mink farm, you know what these
lively creatures are fed to make them produce thick glossy coats: lots
of fish and eggs. Well get to fish in a moment, but first let me
explain that in addition to all the pro-hair vitamins such as biotin and
inositol, eggs are the richest natural source of cysteine. Now, hair is
made of a type of protein called keratin, and keratin is unusually rich
in the aminoacid cysteine. Cysteine contains sulfurhence the
sulfurous smell if hair is burned. Another aminoacid that eggs provide
is tyrosine, needed for hair pigment.
It is also vital for thyroid function and brain function.
Eggs appear to promote hormone production in general, and the right
hormones are indispensable for healthy, bushy hair. Eggs are such
wonderful nutrition that it should be against the law for misguided
health gurus to preach against them and promote egg substitutes. An egg
substitute next to real eggs is what canned baby formula is next to
mothers milk. Unless you are in a genetically susceptible minority,
eggs will not raise your cholesterol to any significant extent. They may
even lower it due to their high lecithin content. Dietary cholesterol as
a rule has no influence on serum cholesterol. Most cholesterol is
produced by the liver. I know Ive already said it two or three times
before, but in these days of misinformation and paranoia about foods
that kept our ancestors healthy for millennia, one sometimes has to say
things over and over to counteract the incessant brainwashing. Your
grandmother knew best: eggs are natures perfect food. And there is
evidence to support the emerging view that they are in fact
heart-healthy.
In fact, one study found a 10% RISE IN HDLS WHEN TWO EGGS A DAY WERE
ADDED
to the usual diet of subjects with cholesterol in the normal range.
The rise in total cholesterol was only 4%, indicating an improved lipid
ratio. Another study used subjects who had high cholesterol. The
addition of two eggs a day resulted in a slight, statistically
insignificant rise in LDLs, and, again, in a statistically significant
rise in HDLs. The new thinking is that the most important indicator of
cardiovascular health and longevity is high HDL levels, for both men and
women.
When my hairdresser commented that she can tell by my hair that I eat
healthy food, I told her I eat lots of eggs and sardines. She said,
"Youre so funny." But of course I was completely serious.
Sardines are not only a wonderful source of protein, but also of
those fabulous anti-inflammatory fish oils. Fish oil helps inhibit the
production of inflammatory prostaglandins that appear to be involved in
hair loss. And listen to this: omega-3 fats, of which fish-oil EPA is
one wonderful representative, increase the production of NO, which
dilates arteries (hence the greater cardiovascular health of fish
eaters) and also promotes hair growth. Sardines provide IODINE as well;
iodine, zinc, copper, and selenium are all important for the hair.
Silicon is probably important for the hair. In any case, its
certainly important for clean arteries, and if you have good blood
circulation and clean arteries, your hair is going to benefit both from
the nutrients and from NO release. Estrogens increase silicon
absorption. NO release and clean arteries are closely related; arteries
damaged by plaque released less hair-growth stimulating NO. The kind of
diet that is good for your arteries is likely to be good for your hair.
Thus, olive oil and avocadoes, with their benefits for the arteries, are
likely to be good for the hair.
Exercise? You bet. It raises HDLs.
The heart-healthy low-glycemic diet, with some dry red wine thrown in
for even lower insulin and cleaner arteries, should also result in
result in improved hair growth. Interestingly, some people who have
tried the low-glycemic diet have reported more hair growth; there is
also some anecdotal evidence that when diabetics lower their insulin
dose, their hair grows more abundantly.
Basically, if you are well-nourished and already take a whole range
of supplements, you shouldnt have to take any special "hair
nutrients." Just remember that eggs and seafood seem especially
beneficial for the hairand of course are wonderful all-round
health-giving foods for the whole body. Likewise, remember that clean
arteries and healthy hair also go together. Why does hair become so
straw-like on very low-fat diet? I suspect the biggest factor is the
drop in hormone production. There may also be downright malnutrition. My
grandmother would immediately prescribe two eggs a day and chicken soup.
And a glass of red wine "to put color in your cheeks."
(Source: Schnohr P et al. Egg consumption and HDL cholesterol. J
Inter Med 1994; 235: 249-51; Knopp R et al. A double-blind, randomized,
controlled trial of the effects of 2 eggs per day in moderately
hypercholesterolemic and combined hyper-lipidemic subjects taught the
NCEP Step I diet. Am J Col Nutr 1997;16:551-61.)
"MY LIPS ARE SEALED": A DISCREET LIP
DEVELOPER
Some of you have written to me that the lip exercises are great, but
provoke merriment when done in public.
Considering that commuting, standing in line, etc is a wonderful time
for developing your lips, here is a more discreet exercise that develops
your lips, chin, and lower cheeks. It also seems to improve lip color
and helps smooth out the laugh lines.
The exercise is simplicity itself. Imagine that you are trying to
seal your lips really, really tight. Press your upper lips down upon the
lower lip, while the lower lip is trying to push up. Another way of
saying this is: purse your lips together as tightly as possible. Your
mouth should look very small, but the lips arent pulled in, as in the
more extreme Mona Lisa smile.
If you feel a lot of tension in the laugh-line/lower-cheek region,
you are doing it right. Press your lips together as hard as you can
several times. Pretty exhausting, eh?
For a more friendly look, or just for variety, pucker up rather than
purse your lips.
Basically, if these exercises sound complicated to you, just keep
puckering up. Surprisingly effective.
Dont let young women have monopoly on full, sensual, luscious
lips! Just as one can develop muscles at any age by lifting weights, so
too anyone can develop fuller lips (with a little assist from nhrt to
prevent skin and lip atrophy; otherwise you can kiss your lips goodbye).
* * * CARE OF THE SOUL * * *
MORE ON
"RE-VISIONING EVE"
(Disclaimer: What follows is offered in the spirit of one more
possible interpretation. CyberHealth does not wish to offend anyones
religious beliefs.)
I hope that you remember our first discussion of Eve, one in which
Rabbi Maller called Eve "the mother of morality and
civilization." Dr. Miriam Robbins Dexter, Ph.D. (linguistics), an
expert on womens spirituality and a Womens Studies instructor at
UCLA and Antioch University, has contributed this comment on Eve:
"My vision of Eden is not at all like Rabbi Mallers. I
dont think of Eve as mortal, despite the Bible. I believe that we
must revision Eve not just as bringer of civilization and morality, but
as a reflection of the ancient goddess who brings life, Chava. Her
association with the snakeicon of prophecy, health, and good
fortuneis thousands of years older than the Hebrew Bible. In ancient
iconography, the goddess of birth, death, and rebirth is often visioned
as both snake and bird.
I like the Kabbalistic view of Eveanything positive about women is
good. I just see the whole thing differently.
Maybe the idea of the great mother is reaching a critical mass.
Even the Pope believes it, being a Mariologist."
Dr. Dexter is among the increasing number of feminist scholars who
follow the work of the archeologist Marija Gimbutas. According to
Gimbutas, during the Paleolithic and Neolithic periods, humanitys
chief religion was centered on God the Mother. Statues and statuettes of
the Great Mother dating back to those prehistoric times have been found
in great abundance in many regions of the world. Historically
considered, it is possible that Eve, "the Mother of All
Living," is an echo, a distant transformation and deformation of
the once-powerful Great Mother, the cosmic spirit of birth, death, and
rebirth.
Dr. Dexters book, "Whence the Goddess" (Pergamon Press
1990), has a fascinating chapter called "The woman and the man and
the tree and the serpent: Near-Eastern tree and serpent
iconography." In it she discusses the fascinating parallels between
the ancient Sumerian myth of paradisal land called Dilmun and the Eden
story. A tree heavy with fruit was an ancient symbol of fertility and
the goddess; the serpent was a sacred animal, a symbol of healing
(and/or immortality) and also an emblem of the Goddess; and the Goddess
typically had a male consort. (Bird imagery was sometimes also present;
I cant help thinking that "the serpent and the dove" are
basically ancient icons of the feminine divine.) Dr. Dexter writes,
"An original myth and icon, which consisted of goddess, sacred
snake, sacred tree, and male consort, perhaps one who aroused the wrath
of the goddess by eating her sacred fruit, became reinterpreted, among
the Hebrews, into a story involving a foolish woman, (. . .) one
responsible for the greatly multiplied sorrow, and the
subservience of women in the ensuing centuries."
A friend of mine has pointed out that while the Bible clearly speaks
of Adams death, it never mentions the death of Eveshe may still be
with us.
This newsletter is presented as a free service for women and
healthcare professionals interested in womens health.
To subscribe, please send the word SUBSCRIBE to < nhrt@worldnet.att.net>
Editorial assistants: Gail Peterson, Monica Smith
Research assistant for this issue: Starla Taliaferro
The material contained herein is intended as information only, and
not as medical advice.
Books by Ivy Greenwell:
- HORMONES WITHOUT FEAR (available from Madison-Bajamar,
800-255-8025)
- A REFERENCE GUIDE TO NATURAL HORMONES FOR MEN
- HOW TO REVERSE OSTEOARTHRITIS (including extensive information on
hormones and arthritis)
- HOW TO HELP PREVENT BREAST AND OVARIAN CANCER
Symptoms
of Hormone Imbalance at HGH Academy
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