Growth Hormone Deficiency in Women
From the time women enter puberty until the end of the last menstrual period every woman is aware of the ebb and flow of constant hormonal changes in her body. This complex interplay of HGH hormones continues until she reaches her late 40’s or early 50’s. HGH Hormone replacement therapy offers a solution to the many physical symptoms of menopause.
About Menopause
The regular cycling of these hormones begin to change as early as the mid-thirties and symptoms likely begin in the mid-forties as women begin the process known as pre-menopause. It is the time when levels of key hormones such as estrogen, progesterone and testosterone begin to fluctuate and are accentuated by declines in other equally important hormones, namely HGH, DHEA/Pregnenolone and even thyroid gland function. Pre-menopause continues until periods stop and the woman become menopausal.
Surgical menopause involves a woman suddenly entering menopause by surgical removal of the ovaries. It can happen at almost any age and without proper hormone replacement, symptoms of hormone deficiency will be quite severe unless they are reversed using HGH as part of a complete hormone replacement therapy.
Though treated as a disease by doctors, women know it as a natural and inevitable transition from one stage of life to another. Puberty marks the beginning of reproductive life menopause marks the end.
Symptoms of Menopause
During pre-menopause (known as the change), women will still have a menstrual cycle, although the cycle may become erratic and woman may skip periods as hormone levels fluctuate. This is only one symptom of menopause. Other symptoms may include:
NOTE: Loss of bone density can be reversed with hormone replacement therapy and HGH in tandem. It has been demonstrated to lessen the risk of heart disease as well by strengthening the heart muscles.
HGH Hormone therapy
Our bones consist of cells that grow new bone tissue and cells that dissolve (re-absorb) old bone. This occurs continually throughout our lives. Estrogen, progesterone and testosterone help our bodies absorb calcium from the intestinal tract. Estrogen slows the action of cells that cause bone breakdown. Progesterone, HGH, and testosterone stimulate cells that build bone. Growth hormone is another hormone that begins to decline as early as the mid-twenties. When raised to more youthful levels, growth hormone (HGH) shows great promise in rebuilding lost bone. During pre-menopause, as hormones decline, women can lose 1 to 6 percent of their bone mass each year and is most pronounced in areas of faster bone growth such as the spine.
HGH Hormone therapy is a successful and widely accepted way to treat the negative effects of menopause and, according to The Journal of the American Medical Association, most effective when started at the onset of menopause.