Understanding Hormonal Imbalance
Hormones are your body's chemical messengers.
Produced in the endocrine glands, these powerful chemicals travel around your bloodstream instructing tissues and organs what to do. They help regulate a lot of your body's major processes, including metabolism and reproduction.
When you have a hormonal imbalance, you have too much or too little of a particular hormone. Even small changes can have major effects throughout your whole body.
Think of hormones like a cake recipe. Too much or too little of any one ingredient affects the final product.
While some hormone levels change throughout your lifetime and might just be the result of natural aging, other changes occur when your endocrine glands get the recipe wrong.
Signs or Symptoms in Women
In females of reproductive age, the most prevalent hormone imbalance is polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS).
Your normal hormonal cycle also changes naturally during these phases:
Symptoms of a hormone imbalance specific to women include:
Causes Unique to Women
Many causes of hormone imbalance in women are related to reproductive hormones. Common causes include:
Treatment Options for a Hormone Imbalance
Treatment for a hormonal imbalance will depend on what's causing it. Some common treatment options are described below.
Estrogen therapy
If you're dealing with hot flashes or other uncomfortable symptoms of menopause, your doctor may recommend a low dose of estrogen
Make sure to discuss the risks and benefits of hormone replacement therapy (HRT) with your doctor.
Vaginal estrogen
If you're experiencing vaginal dryness or pain during sex, you may want to try applying an estrogen cream, tablet, or ring.
Using this local therapy treatment helps eliminate many of the risks linked to systemic estrogen, or estrogen that travels throughout the bloodstream to the appropriate organ.
Hormonal birth control
Hormonal birth control can help regulate your menstrual cycles. Kinds of hormonal birth control include the:
It can also help improve acne and reduce extra hair on the face and body.
Anti-androgen medications
Androgens are male sex hormones that are present in both women and men. Women with high androgen levels may choose to take medication that blocks the effects of androgens.
These effects include:
Metformin is a type 2 diabetes medication that might assist some women with PCOS symptoms. The FDA hasn't approved it to treat PCOS, but it may help lower androgen levels and promote ovulation.
Flibanserin (Addyi) and bremelanotide (Vyleesi)
Addyi and Vyleesi are the only medications that are FDA approved for the treatment of low libido in premenopausal women. Addyi is a pill, and Vyleesi is a self-administered injectable medication.
These drugs might include some major side effects, such as extreme nausea and changes in blood pressure. Speak with your doctor to see if either one could be right for you.
Eflornithine (Vaniqa)
This prescription cream is designed specifically for excessive facial hair in women. Applied topically to the skin, it helps slow new hair growth, but it doesn't eliminate existing hair.
For further information about Dr. Stengler’s practice and his clinic in Oceanside, California, please visit our website at MarkStengler.com or give us a call at (760) 274-2377