HRT study

HRT study

July 2nd, 2010
Reviewed by natural-hormones.net

HRT or Hormone replacement therapy is the name given to the artificial hormone treatment that is capable of treating women a hormonal imbalance. The treatment is considered to be one of the most effective of its kind, but isn't without expense or incumbent risks. A HRT study is a study in order to determine the precise risks and benefits of HRT to individual patients.

Existing HRT study

hrt complicationsAn existing HRT study has found that the risks involved in women using HRT as a treatment method for osteoporosis can come with a certain degree of risk. The HRT study found that because hormone replacement therapy tries to replicate human hormones and dissimilarities in such hormones can cause complications in the human body. Such complications have been known to include breast cancer and troubles with blood clots.

HRT Study: The 1991 National Institute of Health (NIH)

Due to HRTs prevalent use in America the NIH in 1991 sought to precisely quantify the risks and benefits of the treatment in their HRT study. Via the Women's Health Initiative (WHI) they launched the largest HRT study of its kind. The short lived HRT study, which was cancelled in 2002, showed a number of troubling results and such results were responsible for the drop in popularity of hormone replacement therapy around the same time period. hrt clotsThe HRT study proved conclusively that hormone replacement therapy was capable of causing the following increased risks in women:

. Breast cancer
. Ovarian cancer
. Heart disease
. Blood clots
. Strokes

HRT study into alternatives for treating hormonal imbalances

The origin of hormone replacement therapy
HRT was invented in the mid-1960s as a method of helping women to combat their menopause symptoms. Since then there have been a number of HRT studies that have sought to establish the exact risks and benefits of the invasive treatment.

Subsequent HRT studies have shown that other treatment methods can be used to treat menopause symptoms such as osteoporosis. A HRT study found that bisphosphonates and calcitonin are capable of slowing down bone loss while teriparatide can increase bone formation.

What alternatives exist for menopausal women?

Due to the negative nature of the HRT study many women are inclined to look for an alternative approach in the treatment of their menopause symptoms. Such alternatives can include:

Phytoestrogenic herbs: Phytoestrogenic herbs contain phytoestrogens, which are plant like hormones similar to that of human hormones

Non Estrogenic herbs: Such herbs function by encouraging women's hormone receptors into producing more hormones and contain none of the phytoestrogens that can cause a multitude of side effects in women.

Hormone replacement therapy is used by many menopausal women across the world to treat their menopause symptoms. Studies have found however that hormone therapy comes with a flurry of side effects which can be dangerous to women's health. Because of this it is advised that women consider all of the alternatives to hormone replacement therapy before they consider the invasive treatment of hormone replacement therapy.

Click on the following link to read more about treatments for hormone imbalance. What are their function? How should you deal with low estrogen production? and much more.

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HRT study