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Increased kidney stones in postmenopausal women with lower estradiol levels. What about increased dietary oxalate issues too?

June 3, 2022 By Trudy Scott 20 Comments

oxalate menopause

Epidemiological data reveal that the overall risk for kidney stones disease is lower for women compared to age-matched men. However, the beneficial effect for the female sex is lost upon menopause, a time corresponding to the onset of fall in estrogen levels.

The above is from a 2013 paper, Serum estradiol and testosterone levels in kidney stones disease with and without calcium oxalate components in naturally postmenopausal women.

The aim of this study was to look at serum estradiol and testosterone levels of naturally postmenopausal women who had kidney stones.

It was a small study with 113 naturally postmenopausal women with newly diagnosed kidney stones (some with calcium oxalate stones and some with non-calcium oxalate stones) and 84 controls, all around 52 to 62 years of age.

The results were as follows:

  • Serum estradiol (E2) was significantly lower in kidney stones patients compared to controls (21.1 vs. 31.1 pg/ml)
  • Serum testosterone (T) levels did not significantly differ among the groups.

The authors came to the conclusion that “Naturally postmenopausal women with higher remaining estradiol levels appear less likely to suffer from kidney calcium oxalate stones.

These findings support the hypothesis that higher postmenopausal endogenous [produced by the body] estrogens may protect against kidney stones with ageing.”

This is very encouraging research because it means we can do something about it (more on that below).

My question is this: What about increased dietary oxalate issues in this age group? And can there be similar issues in perimenopausal women too? This study only looked at kidney stones but I propose that there is a connection and that declining estradiol is the common factor. I also propose that providing estrogen support may help to counter both issues – kidney stones and/or dietary oxalate issues with no kidney stones, especially with the clinical observations and feedback I have had (more on that below).

Now this may not be the case for all women and is clearly not the only factor when it comes to kidney stones and dietary oxalate issues. But I do feel it needs to be part of the discussion. In menopause, osteoporosis and heart disease are on our radar but kidney stones and dietary oxalate issues are not.

Dr. Felice Gersch talks about estrogen and calcium in bone health and osteoporosis

I really thought I was onto something after hearing Dr. Felice Gersh, MD (a integrative gynecologist who focuses on women’s health and menopause) talk about estrogen and calcium in bone health/osteoporosis on The Osteoporosis Summit earlier this year. This is some of what she shared:

Estrogen affects everything! So estrogen is involved in the development of bone, but it’s even more complex. For example, estrogen allows the proper absorption of calcium, so that you get proper absorption of calcium from food in the gastrointestinal tract. That involves having proper estrogen levels. And having proper estrogen levels allows the reabsorption of calcium in the kidneys so that you don’t excrete a lot of calcium that you shouldn’t be excreting.

As soon as I heard calcium and the kidneys, the light bulbs went off and I started looking for some research. I didn’t expect there to be much because a higher incidence of kidney stones in menopause and the estrogen connection is not something I’ve heard discussed by menopause experts. However, the above study was one of many. Here are a few more studies that support this connection:

  • Estrogen replacement increased the citrate and calcium excretion rates in postmenopausal women with recurrent urolithiasis (urolithiasis is kidney stone disease)
  • Etiological role of estrogen status in renal stone formation

Interestingly this 2021 paper, Association between sex hormones and kidney stones: analysis of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, reports that there is “no independent association between sex hormones (testosterone and estradiol) and history of kidney stones in either males or females.”  This conclusion may be related to the fact that there are fewer studies that include women. I look forward to future research in this area and until then we use the other research and what we see clinically.

How common are dietary oxalate issues in my community of perimenopausal and menopausal women?

I posted the 2013 study and this question on Facebook to see how common an issue it is:

If you have dietary oxalate issues (with or without kidney stones) I’m curious if there is a hormonal connection and specifically if things got worse for you in perimenopause, and got really bad in menopause (as estrogen declines even further). This has certainly been the case for me.

Here is some of the feedback I’ve received on this post and related posts:

Cynthia shared this: “Really interesting! I definitely had oxalate issues (perimenopause) provoked by ruptured appendix/SBO/abscesses and fistula formation (13 day hospitalization)….I had to remove all oxalates and go full carnivore for 9 months….I’m still oxalate sensitive and had not been before…. I will definitely be sharing this with my communities….there are SO many middle aged women with oxalate issues”

Kirsten shared this: “Interesting to know. At the age of 49 (I am now 51), for the first time in my life I developed kidney stones – probably the most painful experience of my life. I eliminated vitamin C supplements and some oxalates (I had a daily dose of “green juice” that I was consuming as well that I no longer take) however I never understood the relationship between estrogen and their development. I am not post menopausal as of yet -but definitely experiencing symptoms common in peri-menopause… Perimenopausal symptoms include – anxiety (the worrying type) which is at its worst around the time I menstruate (taking 5-HTP which helps but doesn’t completely resolve), night sweats, hypoglycemia, HPA dysfunction (which could be a result of perimeno as well as its own issue – or both). If I don’t keep my stress levels in check, everything becomes exacerbated – meditation helps too.”

Leah shared this: I developed oxalate issues after menopause (I’m in my 60s) and didn’t realize what is was until I read your post about it during the early days of the pandemic when people were overdosing on vitamin C (at least you were trying to figure out if there was a connection at the time). With more research, I discovered a product called Kidney Cop that I still take (though I never get stones, only skin issues on my face). I also switched to liposomal vitamin C and amla and cut back on the offensive [high oxalate] foods for me. I do also experience a similar effect when I use collagen powder with peptides (skin issues). When I switched to a powder that didn’t contain peptides but has collagen types 1-5 in it, I had no issues. I don’t know if this is oxalate-related or not, but the skin issue is the same (clear fluid-filled bumps around my mouth and chin only).”

A number of women in the Facebook group Trying Low Oxlaates have shared comments like this: “I was never bothered by oxalate issues before menopause” and “I can tell you that my oxalate problems became far worse – along with everything else, pyroluria, copper toxicity etc – in perimenopause.”

Personally, my severe dietary oxalate issues started in 2012, when I was 52, and it manifested as excruciating foot pain. It was a combination of hot-burning-coals-pain and shards-of-glass-pain. Later it affected my left eye and more recently it impacted my sleep in a big way. I eat low oxalate and use vitamin B6 and calcium citrate (carefully timed) to keep symptoms away. My next plan is to see if addressing my low estrogen will help even more (more on that below).

Approaches to support declining estrogen levels in perimenopause and menopause

Briefly, here is a summary for supporting declining estrogen levels in perimenopause and menopause:

  • Diet and lifestyle including exercise and stress-reduction
  • Amino acid support as needed (GABA supports progesterone and tryptophan supports estrogen) and the pyroluria protocol of zinc, vitamin B6 and evening primrose oil (more on this here)
  • Adrenal support
  • Essential oils such as geranium and rose otto and clary sage and other oils to help with anxiety and stress
  • Liver and kidney support
  • Avoiding environmental toxins, especially xenoestrogens (plastics, fragrances, pesticides etc) which bind to estrogen receptor sites
  • Maca – the research on Femmenessence Maca-Pause for bone and cardio health is very encouraging and I suspect there may be benefits for dietary oxalate issues and kidney stones too (when there is a low estrogen trigger). I will be trying this approach and I’ll report back on what I find.
  • Other herbal approaches for hormonal support: Black cohosh, red clover, dong quai (which, interestingly, are reno-protective too)
  • Bioidentical hormone replacement therapy

This section deserves an entire blog post and is important to address over and above the mood issues, increased anxiety, compromised sleep, low libido, vaginal issues and hot flashes – because of the impacts for heart health, cognitive decline and bone health.

Kidney stones and dietary oxalate issues in men

This 2016 paper addresses kidney stones in males and makes the testosterone connection for men under 60 years of age: Possible role of elevated serum testosterone in pathogenesis of renal stone formation

Urolithiasis [kidney stones] occurs with greater frequency in males with incidences three times higher compared to females indicating some role played by androgens. Stone formation in renal tissues before puberty is similar between males and females, whereas greater frequency is seen in the third to the fourth decade of life when the levels of serum testosterone are also the highest in males.

With advancing age, the probability for stone formation also decreases as consistent with the decline in serum testosterone levels with more than 20% of healthy men over 60 years of age presenting with serum levels of hormone below the range for young men.

This paper does also support the menopausal estrogen connection I’ve mentioned above: “With females, the frequency for stone formation is considered more compared with premenopausal postulated mainly due to low estrogen levels.”

There is so mention of dietary oxalate issues but we do see this clinically.

My other resources on oxalates if this is new to you

This blog, Oxalate crystal disease, dietary oxalates and pain: the research & questions, came out of my quest for finding a medical explanation/term for my own pain caused by dietary oxalates and a desire to gain a better understanding for my clients who experience similar pain.

You can read an overview of oxalates, my pain issues with dietary oxalates, a deeper dive into the condition called oxalate crystal disease (with some of my insights and questions), and the autism and atherosclerosis research.

As I mentioned above, my severe dietary oxalate issues started in 2012 (when I was 52) and it manifested as excruciating foot pain. It was a combination of hot-burning-coals-pain and shards-of-glass-pain. Later it affected my left eye.

You can also read how oxalates can contribute to anxiety, sleep issues (this has been a more recent issue for me), headaches, fatigue and other symptoms.

When I did the research for this older blog I didn’t come across any studies related to menopause and estrogen levels.

I published this blog, Coronavirus and vitamin C for immune support: new pain or more severe pain due to oxalate issues?, to help folks identify the increase in different types of pain they were seeing as a result of using high dose vitamin C. This could be joint pain, eye pain, foot pain, vulvodynia, bladder issues, insomnia, gut pain, kidney pain, changes in thyroid health/labs, bone pain etc.

This blog, Vitamin C causes oxalate formation resulting in pain, anxiety, and insomnia (when there is a defect in ascorbic acid or oxalate metabolism)? is part 2 and reviews some of the research on vitamin C/ascorbic acid being a possible trigger for the formation of oxalates in certain instances.

I do mention the big disconnect that we see in this research is always the mention of kidney stones. The missing piece – in the research and in many articles – is that you can have issues with dietary oxalates when there is no kidney disease/no kidney stones. I propose similar logic for dietary oxalate issues in perimenopause and menopause with declining estrogen levels i.e. dietary oxalate issues with or without kidney stones.

If you’re in perimenopause or menopause have approaches for supporting estrogen (estradiol) made your dietary oxalate issues and/or kidney stones less severe? Please share what has helped and if you have both – dietary oxalate issues and kidney stones/kidney disease.

If you’re a younger woman and have dietary oxalate issues and kidney stones/kidney disease, have you noticed any hormonal connections?

If this doesn’t affect you personally, have you seen the benefits of supporting estrogen with your perimenopausal/menopausal female clients/patients who have dietary oxalate issues and kidney stones/kidney disease?

If you’re male and have had dietary oxalate issues and/or kidney stones have you found they get less severe as you get older and testosterone declines?

If you have questions please share them here too.

Filed Under: Oxalates, Women's health Tagged With: anxiety, bone health, calcium, calcium oxalate, cognitive decline, dietary oxalate issues, Dr. Felice Gersch, estrogen, heart health, hot-flashes, insomnia, kidney stones, libido, lower estradiol levels, men, mood issues, osteoporosis, oxalate menopause, pain, perimenopausal, perimenopause, postmenopausal women, postmenopause, sleep, testosterone, vaginal, vitamin C

The Essential Oils Hormone Solution by Dr. Mariza Snyder – my book review

February 22, 2019 By Trudy Scott 15 Comments

Together with dietary changes and key nutrients like GABA, tryptophan, zinc and vitamin B6, using essential oils are a wonderful tool for helping to ease anxiety, reduce stress, improve sleep and focus and contribute to overall hormonal health for women. Now we have a new book that is a wonderful essential oil resource specifically for women, The Essential Oils Hormone Solution: Reclaim Your Energy and Focus and Lose Weight Naturally by Dr. Mariza Snyder.

She shares this about essential oils:

Essential oils are natural aromatic com­pounds found in the roots, seeds, stems, bark, leaves, and flowers of various plants. They are super-charged, fifty to seventy times more potent than their dried-herbal counterparts. They’re simply the best plant-based remedy that exists, and they have been success­fully used for thousands of years.

Dr. Mariza lists these top 5 must-have hormone-support essential oils for perimenopausal and menopausal women: clary sage, geranium, lavender, peppermint and rosemary. Lavender and peppermint have been long-time favorites of mine and I recently learned about clary sage and rosemary and love both.

She covers so many wonderful essential oils in the book but for the purposes of this review I’ll focus on clary sage since it was new to me until recently and may be new to you too.

In the chapter on sleep, she shares this about the benefits of clary sage and how to use this essential oil:

CLARY SAGE (Salvia sclarea)

  • Promotes relaxation of the body for a restful night’s sleep
  • Calms and soothes the mind and body
  • Supportive during menstrual distress

Aromatic Use 

  • Apply 1–2 drops directly to bedclothes or pillow.
  • Diffuse 3–4 drops before bedtime.

Topical Use

  • Dilute 1–2 drops with your favorite carrier oil and massage into abdomen.
  • Add 2–3 drops to a warm bath with ¼ cup Epsom salts dis­solved in the water.
  • Dilute 1–2 drops with your favorite carrier oil and massage into your soles before bedtime.

I had looked into clary sage about 6 months ago when I learned that it supports serotonin production and also lowers high cortisol.

Interestingly, I didn’t care for the aroma of clary sage when I first purchased it and I diffused it with lavender and rosemary to disguise the aroma. But I have grown to really like it and use a drop on a hanky each night and look forward to how much it helps me sleep and the fact that it eased the mild hot flashes I had started to experience again.

I love the combinations/blends Dr. Mariza recommends in the book and would have welcomed these ideas when I first started using clary sage myself. Here is one example of a rollerball blend with clary sage:

Tense-Away Rollerball Blend

10 drops Lavender essential oil

10 drops Clary Sage essential oil

10 drops Peppermint essential oil

Carrier oil of choice

I also really like that Dr. Mariza describes different ways to use the oils other than only diffusing – like using rollerballs, using them for massages and in baths, and applying the essential oils on various parts of the body for a more direct impact. One such example is the Hormone Synergy Rollerball Blend (which contains clary sage, lavender, geranium, bergamot and ylang ylang). She recommends applying this blend directly over your ovaries.

I learned this direct application tip from Dr. Mariza last year and started using lavender, peppermint and rosemary (in a carrier oil) topically on my belly before bed. It helps with digestion, occasional belly bloat from SIBO (if I’ve eaten something that triggers symptoms) and is relaxing too. I think I’ll add clary sage to this belly blend too for the added hormone benefits. This could be one way to use clary sage for the benefits if you find you don’t really like the aroma (because it will be further from your nose!)

Here are some of the benefits of the other top 5 hormone-support essential oils for perimenopausal and menopausal women that Dr. Mariza shares:

  • geranium – calming and soothing and “rejuvenates and revitalizes skin, complexion, and hair” (I haven’t been using this one and looking forward to trying this one)
  • lavender – “eases and calms feelings of anxiety, stress, and tension while rebalancing emotions” and “relieves discomfort associated with menstrual cycles” (I’ve been using lavender for years)
  • peppermint – “stimulates mental focus and energy by enlivening the senses” and supports your respiratory system (I also use this one all the time. It’s also great for headaches and neck pain)
  • and rosemary – “increases memory, concentration, and focus” (I also use it for EMF/electromagnetic radiation protection. Research shows rosemary could play a protective role against this harmful effect through its antioxidant activity)

Clary sage is also featured in the libido chapter: “Commonly used to stimulate sexual energy and boost libido.” This aspect was new to me, but it makes sense given that it lowers cortisol and supports serotonin production (and hence estrogen). Dr. Mariza also covers many other wonderful essential oils that boost libido too: jasmine, neroli, rose, sandalwood, ylang ylang and geranium.  In one study neroli, lavender, fennel, geranium, and rose significantly improved sexual function in menopausal women.

Here is the official book blurb:

Have your hormones been hijacked? Do you feel energy-depleted and irritable, unable to sleep, stay focused, or lose weight? You may have attributed these symptoms to the natural hormonal fluctuations that occur with age. But behind the scenes, there are a host of pesky culprits wreaking havoc on your hormonal health: chronic stress, air pollution, chemical-laden foods and cleaning supplies, and the synthetic estrogens in personal care products. Women of all ages are left vulnerable to the consequences, suffering from unnecessary hormonal imbalance and frustrating symptoms that are often dismissed by their doctors.

Dr. Mariza Snyder is here to help put you back in control of your health. In The Essential Oils Hormone Solution, you will learn how to heal hormonal chaos and revitalize the body from the inside out with the support of high-quality essential oils. You’ll learn how essential oils work on a cellular level to mitigate the toxic loads we carry, and how to use essential oils to reduce cravings, get deep, restful sleep, ease stress, improve mood, banish the worst symptoms of PMS, regain focus and concentration, boost libido, and increase energy.

Featuring a 14-day plan to jumpstart your hormonal health, with over 100 essential oil blends, daily self-care rituals, and delicious, easy-to-prepare recipes, you’ll discover how to reset your body and pave the way for improved hormonal health, without taking hormones.

Grab your copy of The Essential Oils Hormone Solution here (my Amazon link).

I’d like to add my thoughts on what I have found to be safe use of essential oils, and what I share with my clients (I consider myself an essential oil user like you – I’m not an expert):

  • Always use a carrier oil, unless you are diffusing, and this includes using essential oils in the bath (I know there is some conflicting advice on this, but I like to err on the side of caution)
  • Don’t try to remove too much of an essential oil with water – it will only drive it deeper into the skin
  • Think low doses i.e. a little goes a long way
  • Be sure to rotate your essential oils
  • Don’t ingest the oils neat or even in a gelatin capsule. I would only consider doing so if I was working with an experienced practitioner and using an enteric coated capsule  (there is definitely conflicting advice on this one but again I like to err on the side of caution)

It’s a fun book with wonderful ideas for how to combine essential oils and use them to improve hormone imbalance. I love this quote from Dr. Mariza:

Inhaling them and applying them is like adorning yourself in something truly beautiful

What are your favorite essential oils and combinations for easing anxiety, reducing stress, improving sleep and balancing your hormones? How are you “adorning yourself” and what is your favorite way to use them – diffused, topically, via a rollerball, or via a massage or in the bath? Feel free to post questions here too.

Filed Under: Books, Essential oils Tagged With: anxiety, calming, clary sage, cortisol, Dr. Mariza Snyder, energy, essential oils, focus, hormone, hormones, insomnia, lavender, libido, mood, peppermint, PMS, serotonin, sleep, stress, The Essential Oils Hormone Solution

Beyond the Pill by Dr. Jolene Brighten – my book review

February 15, 2019 By Trudy Scott 9 Comments

I really wish this book – Beyond the Pill A 30-Day Program to Balance Your Hormones, Reclaim Your Body, and Reverse the Dangerous Side Effects of the Birth Control Pill by Dr. Jolene Brighten – was available when I was in my 30s and on the pill.

Dr. Jolene mentions a study in the Journal of the American Medical Association which reports the following:

women who began the pill were more likely to be prescribed an antidepressant – which means it contributes to a bit more than moodiness.

This was not a small study and included over one million women.

Symptoms caused by the pill and the damage it does to your body

This book, Beyond the Pill, provides a comprehensive list of symptoms caused by the pill:

  • hormonal confusion: missing or irregular periods, light or heavy periods, short cycles, infertility, headaches
  • digestive problems: leaky gut, gut dysbiosis, inflammatory bowel disease
  • energy reduction: fatigue, adrenal and thyroid dysfunction
  • skin issues: hair loss, dry skin
  • mood disruption: depression, anxiety
  • lady part disturbance: low libido (Oh, hell no!), vaginal dryness, chronic infection, pain with sex
  • vitamin, mineral, and antioxidant depletion (such as folate, B12, and magnesium) (I’ll add vitamin B6 to this list too – it is mentioned elsewhere in the book)

The pill does further damage to your body and also:

  • intensifies the risk of blood clots, which lead to strokes
  • increases the risk of breast, cervical, and liver cancers
  • increases the risk of diabetes
  • raises the risk of heart attacks
  • triggers autoimmune disease

Truth-bombs about how the pill works

She shares plenty of truth-bombs about how the pill works – like these gems:

As long as you’re on the pill, your brain and ovaries aren’t talking, which can seriously affect all your hormones.

When you take that week of placebo pills, you’re not actually getting a period because you never ovulated. Instead, this is what is called a withdrawal bleed (I did not know this!)

Post–birth control syndrome (PBCS)

I first became aware of Dr. Jolene’s brilliance in this area when she started writing about Post–birth control syndrome (PBCS) a few years ago. PBCS is “is a constellation of symptoms women experience when they discontinue hormonal birth control.” She has found the symptoms of PBCS – hormonal irregularities like no period or heavy bleeding, acne, mood swings and anxiety, headaches, infertility, pill-induced PCOS (polycystic ovarian syndrome), hypothyroidism, gut issues and even autoimmune symptoms – typically occur in the first 4-6 months after stopping the pill. To make it easy for you the PBCS symptoms are all laid out in a handy quiz in the book.

She has found these symptoms won’t go away without taking the necessary steps that include detox, gut repair, healing the thyroid and adrenals, addressing metabolic health or blood sugar control, boosting mood, improving libido and addressing nutritional deficiencies that the pill has caused. This is all covered in the book as a 30-day program to balance your hormones, reclaim your body, and reverse the dangerous side effects of the birth control pill.

I really appreciate that Dr. Jolene shares this:

I want you to know I’m not anti-pill. Nope. I’m pro–informed consent, which means doctors giving you all the information you need to consent to taking birth control.

This book will help you understand what those hormonal symptoms mean, how the pill is affecting your body, and what to do if you either need to stay on it or are ready to get off it.

Addressing low vitamin B6, low serotonin and low GABA

Here are a few of the nutritional supporting approaches she covers (all supported by research) that are very applicable for support for anxiety specifically and relevant to what you’ve been learning from me: addressing low vitamin B6, low serotonin and low GABA.

Because the pill depletes vitamin B6, she recommends up to 100mg per day for PMS and mood-related symptoms, and symptoms of PBCS. (I know vitamin B6 is controversial and she does acknowledge this).

Dr Jolene identifies the concerning and far-reaching effects of the pill on serotonin: “studies have shown that women on the pill don’t metabolize tryptophan normally” affecting both serotonin and melatonin production, reducing kynurenic acid and raising high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hs-CRP), a marker of inflammation and immune system activation, and shifting the “tryptophan pathway… toward quinolinic acid production, which is inflammatory and harmful to the brain.”

I would have loved to see more about tryptophan and 5-HTP and even vitamin B6 (given that it is crucial for the conversion of tryptophan away from quinolinic acid) in this section of the book. Using tryptophan as a supplement is only briefly mentioned and 50-100mg 5-HTP is only recommended for serotonin-related cravings. As you may know from my work using targeted trials of the amino acid tryptophan and/or 5-HTP offers very quick anxiety relief and  support for PMS within 3 cycles. Fortunately, you can fill in the gaps and use what I teach about these amino acids in conjunction with everything else in the book.

I do love that she adds to our knowledge base with other tips, sharing that the botanicals “passionflower and skullcap support healthy serotonin production by reducing quinolinic acid production.” This was new to me and I’m intrigued.

I love what she writes about progesterone inducing “a sense of calm and a deep sense of love and connection by stimulating gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) receptors.”  Theanine and taurine (a precursor of GABA) are recommended and taurine is also part of her detox and adrenal protocols which I love.

However, I use GABA itself extensively in my work and find it to be more effective than theanine or taurine for the anxiety symptoms – it’s a firm favorite for the majority of my anxious clients. Again, you can fill in the gaps and check out what I share about GABA for very quick anxiety relief and PMS support.

 

My other favorite sections: libido and orgasms, and liver detox

Some of my other favorite sections include the libido section and her wonderful information about orgasms – she shares the myriad of health benefits of orgasms and recommends once-weekly orgasms but need I say more than this comment from Dr. Jolene:

Women can have four different types of orgasm throughout the month because of the hormonal changes we experience. Dude, this is a serious reason to consider ending that pill pack.

I couldn’t resist including this advice for anxiety and insomnia:

Trouble with anxiety? Have sex. Trouble with insomnia? Have sex. When you have an orgasm and release oxytocin, it relaxes you, calms your mind, and enables you to get a good night’s sleep. Besides oxytocin, your body releases vasopressin during orgasm, a hormone that often accompanies the release of melatonin.

If you do have low libido Dr. Jolene has this covered.

I also love the liver detox chapter and so will you. You’ll learn that the pill can cause benign liver tumors and can contribute to gallstones and gallbladder disease. She also shares this about the synthetic estrogen in birth control pills and the liver/libido connection:

There is some concern that long-term exposure to the synthetic estrogen in birth control pills actually alters your liver genes to make higher levels of SHBG (sex hormone binding globulin) for the rest of your life. Unfortunately, SHBG also binds up your testosterone. The result is a libido that’s nonexistent.

She also has you covered on how to detox as part of this wonderfully comprehensive hormone balancing program.

The official book blurb

Out of the 100 million women – almost 11 million in the United States alone – who are on the pill, roughly 60 percent take it for non-contraceptive reasons like painful periods, endometriosis, PCOS, and acne. While the birth control pill is widely prescribed as a quick-fix solution to a variety of women’s health conditions, taking it can also result in other more serious and dangerous health consequences.

Did you know that women on the pill are more likely to be prescribed an antidepressant? That they are at significantly increased risk for autoimmune disease, heart attack, thyroid and adrenal disorders, and even breast and cervical cancer? That the pill can even cause vaginal dryness, unexplained hair loss, flagging libido, extreme fatigue, and chronic infection.

As if women didn’t have enough to worry about, that little pill we’re taking to manage our symptoms is only making things worse.

This book is perfect for you if

  • You’re a woman in your child-bearing years and are currently on the pill, considering the pill, have been on the pill in the past and had issues, and even did well on the pill in the past
  • You’re a woman like me and past the birth control age and yet are intrigued to get a better understanding of how you may have been affected by the pill in the past and also want a better understanding of your body and hormonal health going forward
  • You have a daughter or grand-daughter or niece or friend you can gift a copy to
  • You are a practitioner who works with women
  • You are a curious male with women in your life and would like to understand them better so you can continue to have the healthiest relationship possible.

I’m already recommending this book and will continue to recommend it going forward!

This much-needed solution-based and heavily referenced book released January 29. It’s ground-breaking information and I’m thrilled to be sharing it with you!

Grab your copy of Beyond the Pill (my Amazon link) and find additional information here.

I now recognize that post–birth control syndrome (PBCS) was part the perfect storm that contributed to my anxiety and panic attacks in my late 30s (and a whole host of other symptoms). Personally, I found the entire book fascinating reading, and wish I’d had access to this material while I was in the midst of trying to figure things out.

Fortunately, GABA and tryptophan helped immensely with my anxiety and PMS (together with everything else I did) and I eventually discovered FAM (Fertility Awareness Method). But wish I’d know about this safer option when I was younger. Dr. Jolene is a big fan of FAM and covers it extensively in the book, sharing what I found to be true: it works even if it seems scary at first AND you get to learn so much about your body.

Please feel free to share your experiences with the birth control pill (both good and bad), why it was prescribed and what you learn from this book that can help others in your situation. Feel free to post questions here too.

Filed Under: Books, GABA, serotonin, Women's health Tagged With: antidepressant, anxiety, BCP, Beyond the Pill, Dr. Jolene Brighten, GABA, insomnia, libido, orgasm, post-birth control syndrome, serotonin, the birth control pill, the pill

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  • How the correct approach, dose and sublingual use of GABA can be calming and not cause a flushed and itchy face and neck
  • The amino acid glutamine improves low mood by addressing gut health, and it has calming effects too
  • Flight anxiety with heightened breath, physical tension and also fearing the worst (the role of low GABA and low serotonin)

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