Dr. Jenifer Worden

How homeopathy can help with menopausal symptoms by Dr. Jenifer Worden

The menopause is that stage  of a woman’s life when her repro­ductive system starts to wind down,  causing a wide range of symptoms, some of which can be very distressing  and debilitating. The vast majority of women will start to experience  the so-called “change of life” in their late 40s but symptoms may  persist after a woman has passed her 60th birthday.

The main symptoms experienced are hot flushes, night sweats, bladder  prob­lems such as cystitis and infections, depressed mood, reduced sex  drive, for­getfulness and reduced concentration. For most women,  symptoms will last two to three years, starting with an irreg­ularity of  periods and ending with the periods completely stopping. After 12  months, a woman who has not experi­enced any periods is commonly said to  have gone through the menopause and to be “post-menopausal”. Any  vaginal bleeding after this time should always be reported to a doctor  or practice nurse as it could be an early sign of endome­trial cancer  (cancer of the womb).

As a GP I am often asked by worried women to carry out blood tests to  see whether or not they are going through the menopause but such tests  do have drawbacks. They only give a “snapshot” of the hormone levels a  woman is expe­riencing at a certain point in time and are notorious for  being returned from the testing laboratory as being within the normal  range when the patient is quite clearly experiencing some or all of the  symptoms of the menopause. Patients often feel let down by the results,  which is why GPs tend to advise against these tests in general. The  excep­tion to the rule is where a woman has a congenital lack of a womb  or has had a hysterectomy with preservation of her ovaries. Changes to  the menstrual cycle are not apparent in these women and early subtle  changes of the menopause can be confused with a mild depression, perhaps  leading to incorrect treatment of the underlying problem. In the end,  the best way to judge whether a woman is going through the menopause is  to lis­ten to her and to look at her as a whole which is the holistic  approach.

Often all a woman will need at this point in her life is reassurance  that her symptoms are normal and that she is not suffering from a mental  illness. The ups and downs of teenage girls at puberty are echoed in  women at the menopause but without the ability to scream and shout and  to flounce out of the house, slamming the door. Instead, most women will  either be looking after a family or working, which can lead them to  feel­ing trapped emotionally and physically by their symptoms. Why some  women sail through the menopause with the minimum of symptoms and others  regard it as the worst time of their lives is not understood by the  scientific com­munity and exactly what causes hot flushes is also  somewhat of a mystery. Although we know that it is the reduc­tion of  levels of oestrogen (the principle female hormone) that seems to be  res­ponsible for hot flushes and night sweats, the exact means by which  this happens is not clear. What is clear is that for women with  debilitating symptoms and a markedly reduced quality of life, HRT can  literally be a life-saver, increasing the hormone levels back up to  normal and often having a dramatic effect, reducing symptoms to a more  manageable state within a week or so of starting treatment.

The problem with HRT 

So if HRT is so wonderful, why has it fallen from grace recently?  The main reason is research showing that HRT could increase the risks of  having a heart attack or stroke. The Women’s Health Initiative (WHI)  study (2002) was carried out in the United States on a population of  women ten years older than would commonly be prescribed HRT in the UK  and who also had existing risk factors for heart disease. Although the  older and less fit women in the research could have biased the results  against HRT as they were inherently more likely to suffer from heart  disease, the medical pro­fession was concerned enough by the results to  significantly reduce their prescribing of HRT.

This course of action was backed up by the Million Women Study,  funded by Cancer Research UK, which looked at an increased risk of  cancers linked to taking HRT, principally cancer of the womb. It is  estimated that at least 340,000 women stopped taking HRT after the WHI  research was published and that of the 300,000 women esti­mated each  year to enter the menopause, many will now look at alternatives to  conventional treatment. The National Institute for Clinical Excellence  (NICE) currently recommends HRT for the relief of debilitating vasomotor  and urogen­ital symptoms (hot flushes, night sweats, cystitis,  recurrent urinary infections, vaginal dryness) in women over 50 and for  two to three years only, with an annual review of symptoms. Women under  fifty (the most common age for the menopause), particularly those  hav­ing hysterectomy with removal of the ovaries or undergoing an early  (prema­ture) menopause can still be prescribed HRT as they are only receiving hor­mones that they would normally have.