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Sex Hormone Balance: Serious Anti-Aging and Disease Prevention
Posted By Wellness Club On January 22, 2008 @ 6:30 pm In Bone and Joint Health,Cancer,Healthy Appearance,Heart and Circulation,Senior Health,Sexual Health | No Comments
In both males and females, a decline or imbalance of the sex hormones is associated with a wide variety of health problems.
Imbalanced or decreased sex hormones in women can cause:
Imbalanced or decreased sex hormones in men can cause:
Youthful hormone balance, achieved with natural (“bio-identical”) hormone replacement therapy is considered a main-stay of anti-aging and longevity medicine.
Best Test for Sex Hormone Balance
The sex hormones can be tested in blood, saliva or urine. Urine provides the most accurate results, saliva is next best and blood testing is least accurate. Here’s why:
The sex hormones are released in “pulsed” doses throughout a 24-hour period. One hour, the output may be high, the next hour it may be low. This is a normal pattern for both sex and adrenal hormone excretion.
A blood sample gives us only a “photograph” of the hormones present at the time the blood is drawn. It tells us nothing about the 24-hour average of hormones (which is the real number we are concerned with). Blood testing is the least accurate measure of sex and adrenal hormones.
Saliva, which reflects an “average” of the 24-hour hormone content of the blood, is the next most accurate.
Because a 24-hour urine test “captures” both the highs and lows of hormone output for an entire 24-hour time period and averages them, this method of hormone testing is in my opinion the “Gold Standard” of hormone testing.
I currently recommend urine hormone testing for any patient who has concerns of hormone balance (which should be everyone over age 35-40!). Saliva testing is next best but does not appear to be as accurate.
What’s Your EQ?
Do you know what your EQ — estrogen quotient — is? You should, because this may be the single most important piece of information for preventing breast and prostate cancer. Here’s why:
Estriol (E3) is a “good” estrogen and higher levels of estriol are associated with less cancer risk. Estriol appears to block many of the effects of the carcinogenic estrogens, estradiol (E2), estrone (E1), and other related “pro-carcinogenic” estrogens. How do you find out if you have enough estriol to protect you from cancer? You calculate your EQ.
Studies done in the 19060′s and 1970′s showed that women with an EQ above 1.0 had a significantly lower risk of breast cancer. Many women today have EQ’s of less than 1.0, and breast cancer rates are on the rise. This is no coincidence.
Although the EQ ratio has been best-studied in women, it appears that a similar ratio may be predictive for prostate cancer in men.
I now recommend that my patients who have hormone testing done have the EQ performed at the same time. The results, if unfavorable, are easily improved with dietary changes, supplements, iodine therapy or other natural measures. Where cancer is concerned, “prevention” trumps “early detection” every time.
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