The HRT Unlocker
NEXT|August 2019

The shifting state of female hormones during ‘the change’ can mean sleeplessness, fuzzy thinking, mood swings and hot flushes for many women. But it’s not all bad news, relief in the form of hormone replacement therapy is back from exile.

Donna Chisholm
The HRT Unlocker

Some days, when the words she wanted wouldn’t come, Helen Yarrow privately wondered if she was in the early stages of dementia. She’d just turned 50 and the medical receptionist found herself struggling to name familiar objects. “If I was trying to think of a bench seat, say, I’d be calling it ‘that seat without a back to it.’”

She was too embarrassed to talk to anyone about it, even at work, but she was finally motivated to see her doctor when, at the end of last year, she began waking each day feeling as if she was nursing a terrible hangover even though she doesn’t drink. “I was nauseous and dizzy all morning, and felt as if I hadn’t slept at all. I was irritable and grumpy. I just felt lousy. I tried to hide it, but I realised it wasn’t right.”

“It feels hormonal,” she told Dr Mona Ponnen, a women’s health specialist at a South Auckland medical clinic. She was right. Three weeks after starting hormone replacement therapy (HRT) – usually prescribed to treat the physical symptoms of menopause, such as hot flushes and night sweats – her brain fog lifted, along with her mood.

UPDATED RESEARCH

Helen is one of an increasing number of women benefiting from a resurgence in the use of HRT (now called menopausal hormone therapy), after it was wrongly demonised by a poorly reported study from the US Women’s Health Initiative (WHI) in 2002, which linked it with an increased risk of breast cancer and heart attacks.

This story is from the August 2019 edition of NEXT.

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This story is from the August 2019 edition of NEXT.

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