Not exact matches
And I told her I was taking a combined Estrogen and Testosterone cream, and a
And I
told her I was taking a combined
Estrogen and Testosterone cream, and a
and Testosterone cream,
and a
and a...
And she said, «You --» She was — I — «Just from what you're telling me...» She goes I'm betting that you're one of that small minority of women that can not take [inaudible] This is new uhm — uh — uhm — uh — evidence that's coming out that start — just starting to uhm — come out that you're one of those minute uhm — women that — I mean, minute number of women that can not have their Estrogen and their Testosterone togeth
And she said, «You --» She was — I — «Just from what you're
telling me...» She goes I'm betting that you're one of that small minority of women that can not take [inaudible] This is new uhm — uh — uhm — uh — evidence that's coming out that start — just starting to uhm — come out that you're one of those minute uhm — women that — I mean, minute number of women that can not have their
Estrogen and their Testosterone togeth
and their
Testosterone together.
Patients may go to their doctors» office with symptoms of hormone disorders but are often
told their hormones, such as thyroid,
estrogen, progesterone,
testosterone and adrenal hormones are fine according to standard blood tests.
At this point, patients are
told they have a hormonal imbalance
and will need natural hormone replacement that can include
estrogen, progesterone,
and sometimes also
testosterone.
Drs. John Lee
and David Zava, in their book What Your Doctor May Not
Tell You About Breast Cancer, speculate that elevated levels of
testosterone in women may be the result of the hormonal imbalance caused by menopausal
estrogen dominance
and the lack of progesterone.