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क्या रजोनिवृत्ति मस्तिष्क स्वास्थ्य को प्रभावित कर सकती है? स्त्री रोग विशेषज्ञ ने एस्ट्रोजन की गिरावट और पार्किंसंस रोग के बीच संबंध का खुलासा किया
रजोनिवृत्ति एक महिला के स्वास्थ्य के लिए एक प्रमुख मील का पत्थर है। एस्ट्रोजन का स्तर गिर जाता है और मासिक धर्म चक्र स्थायी रूप से समाप्त हो जाता है। दूसरे शब्दों में कहें तो पीरियड्स पूरी तरह बंद हो जाते हैं। महिलाओं में एस्ट्रोजन में तेज गिरावट का अनुभव होता है, जिससे हृदय संबंधी से लेकर न्यूरोडीजेनेरेटिव विकारों तक कई बीमारियों का खतरा होता है। (चित्र साभार: शटरस्टॉक) सामान्य लक्षणों में…
Lifestyle factors like stress, poor diet, and lack of exercise can worsen these imbalances. Hormone Imbalance in Women Over 40 – Understand how changing hormone levels affect mood, metabolism, and sleep, and explore natural ways to restore balance.
Learn more here: https://bit.ly/4nfX3sN
Menopause Affects Your Bone Health
Menopause Affects Your Bone Health
“Especially, in the current pandemic situation, most of us are home bound, so nutritional levels, vitamin balance and physical activity has all been hampered. Plus, women tend to ignore their health or keep the health of their family before their own. Hence, the chance of deteriorating bone health among them is higher than before.” ‘All women over the age of 45 years should have a bone density…
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Anikah Salim got a headache in September 2014. No big deal. She had dealt with headaches since she was a kid. Usually, over-the-counter medication was enough to chase them away.
But this one was different. The drugs didn’t seem to dent it. Plus, it just wouldn’t go away.
After enduring 3 days of excruciating pain, Salim took herself to the emergency room. It would be almost a year before her headache disappeared.
“It was like basically a hammer, just someone pounding a hammer consistently every day,” says Salim, who is in her 30s. “When people came around, they had to whisper. No lights were on. No TV was on. I mean, I’ve never had to do this with a headache.”
Salim had other symptoms. She was sensitive to sound and light. Her face swelled. On really bad days, her vision would blur and fade. At times, she lost feeling and full use of her left arm.
Salim, who works as an epidemiologist for the federal government and lives near Baltimore, knew something was seriously wrong. She feared she might have a brain tumor or slow hemorrhage or neurological disease.
“This is not a migraine. Something’s wrong with my brain,” Salim remembers thinking. “It was terrifying. I’ve never experienced that kind of pain, before or since.”
Seven months later, in the spring of 2015, a neurologist diagnosed Salim with chronic migraine with aura. The aura causes strange light effects generated by the brain. After taking a full medical history, the doctor told her that she had likely been having migraines for most of her life, including her childhood. She just didn’t know it.
But her latest symptoms were “intractable,” which meant doctors couldn’t pinpoint triggers and couldn’t figure out an effective treatment.
After trying a number of different medications alone and in combination, Salim finally started to get some relief in August 2015.
Over the last 5 years, she and her doctors have continued to fine-tune her treatment. Salim has learned that one of the most important keys to finding effective relief is collaboration.
For example, when Salim noticed that the regular migraines at the start of her menstrual cycle were harder to treat, her doctors took notice. Together with Salim’s gynecologist, they zeroed in on a plan to adjust her estrogen levels before her period. Salim’s pre-period migraines used to knock her out for a week or longer. Now she usually recovers in 24-48 hours, though she still uses other treatments.
Not all doctors, even headache specialists, may be willing or knowledgeable enough to try a hormone therapy for migraines. That kind of teamwork, Salim says, is one of the keys to effective migraine management. Read more
How to Lower Estrogen Levels