Yay! Hope you feel better soon.
You're welcome! It's a long read, but hopefully easier to navigate.
Yes! Good for you for advocating for yourself! The side effects of MHT are actually very mild, and as your doctor stated, are usually only present the first few weeks.
My advice, slap the patch on and forget it...like try not to think about it, or relate it to anything you might be feeling (weird twinges, or whatever). Just keep busy and then over the course of a week or two....see how you feel overall, don't focus on the day-to-day weird blips that come and go.
And keep us posted!
It's great that menopause is coming up in prominent news feeds, but "having a moment" seems a bit diminishing, like it's a temporary thing.
Hormonal testing only shows what your hormones were doing on the day the test was taken -- nothing more. So your levels don't mean anything really. You know you're post-menopausal after you've gone 12 full months without a period, and that's it. There's no other test that confirms this. It's just being w/o a period for 12 months.
So if you still have periods (even irregular), you are in perimenopause and not post-menopausal at all.
I wonder if the more 'social' folk notice a distinct difference now in menopause. For me, I've always had a smaller social circle and preferred to be at home rather than out at different events, etc. I think the covid isolation contributed to being more of a homebody for a lot of people. Too much noise, too much stimulation, too much nonsense can really feel like an assault to our senses and our tolerance levels.
Well don't feel guilty for thinking those thoughts, I think we can all relate.
I would think that taking it every so often should be fine, but because the Mirena more than adequately covers the progesterone side of things, you may also get some negative side effects from the extra progesterone. (increased anxiety/depression/bloat). I don't think the progesterone tablet takes time to "build-up" in your system before it starts working, so you should notice sleepy effects shortly after taking it, but make sure you take it before bed.
c/menopause is pretty much self-explantory
Hey I thought I responded, but maybe it didn't save. Are you still using the black cohosh? You want to be careful with that as high dosages may increase risk for liver damage.
For 'typical' starter dosages of hormones, you want to go with an estrogen-only patch. The lowest dose is 0.025, then 0.0375 (in some brands), then 0.050, 0.075, 0.1mg. Generally it's a good idea to start with the lowest dose, and if symptoms are persistent after 6 weeks or so, then you'd want to increase to the next level.
If you have a uterus, then you also have to progesterone. The common (lower risk) progesterone is Prometrium, and dosages are 100mg daily (which is standard). This is only increased if the dosage of estrogen goes up to around the 0.1mg range. Otherwise 100mg daily is good for any of the lower dose estrogens.
exactly, I was super excited to see that science is digging deeper into estrogen's effects. We are seeing more proof that estrogen is necessary for so many of our bodily systems and for those of us in menopause, the proof is already there!
Yup hormones are likely the culprit and will settle down, but probably a good idea to see a derma too if they are persistent or get worse.
Reverse puberty indeed!
We always hear about voice deepening, more facial hair, or hair loss, which I think scares people off, but have you noticed anything different with muscle mass (like maintaining what you have, or building more)? Or feeling more energized?
It's great to know it's helping with libido!