After decades when menopausal women were steered away from hormone therapy due to breast cancer concerns, new evidence shows it may be right for some.
Impulsive, anxious, overheated, scatter-brained, depressed and in pain are just some of the terms that many women use to describe themselves when they reach perimenopause, or the years that ...
New evidence suggests there may be a critical window for hormone replacement therapy use in women to maintain estrogen levels and protect against cognitive decline.
The change removes several major safety notices from common hormone products, but doctors say decisions should remain individualized.
U.S. health officials are taking the first steps toward removing the long-standing black box warning on estrogen products prescribed to treat menopause symptoms — a move that ...
One option for treatment is hormone replacement therapy, or HRTs such as estrogen medication to relieve hot flashes and night ...
Compounding that statistic, prior studies indicate some trans people at high risk for HIV transmission are hesitant to take ...
Around the time I turned 50, my periods started to become sporadic. They’d disappear for a few months, then return with a ...
Using menopausal hormone therapy (MHT) was not associated with an increased risk of breast cancer in women with inherited ...
Please provide your email address to receive an email when new articles are posted on . Current or past menopausal hormone therapy use was tied to a small biological aging discrepancy vs. never use.
Results from the WHI study instilled "mass fear" and not facts, in women. May 22, 2012— -- A reappraisal of the NIH Women's Health Initiative study has found that "the age when women start ...
More women are asking about testosterone therapy. Here’s what the science shows, the risks to know, and who may benefit from ...