Guest guest Posted April 23, 2009 Report Share Posted April 23, 2009 >ovaries produce hormones. cysts are probably a result of insufficient or overabundance of a specific hormone. I thought mature follicles themselves produce estradiol, and corpus luteum progesterone. Not just the ovarian tissue--- although both of those things are technically ovarian tissue - but present in the ovary at different points in the cycle.... so for example, if your mom smoked while pregnant with you or ate a bunch of pesticides, you could have damaged follicles which don't produce enough E..... am I correct?? As far as I know there are several different kinds of ovarian cysts.. follicular, luteal, not sure what type PCOS cysts are.. etc. Not sure wether they produce hormones or not.. it probably depends on the type? I feel (not confirmed yet) like I get a follicular cyst every month.. like my ovary has a hard time ovulating.. dull pain for about 4 days. Last month I tried putting on a bunch of estradiol immediately when I felt the ache, and it went away very quickly - I'm thinking i made myself ovulate more efficiently.. LH and FSH levels are normal, so I'm thinking I've got whimpy follicles which don't produce enough E to pop themselves. Interestingly, the luteal phase of that month was horrible!! Super sore breasts and very bloated... maybe a good E spike at midcycle means a perhaps " overly healthy " corpus luteum and a much " too healthy " P level? I already know I make lots of P anyway. Ok guess I got side tracked talking about my own cyst issues.. Going to see a gynecological endocrinologist here in Berlin.. hope he is worth it. Thus far every doctor I have seen looks at me like I'm completely crazy when I tell them I take SRT3 and where can I find a compounding pharmacy? And it is illegal to import prescription meds. christina -- In rhythmicliving , " wild.dingo " wrote: > > No. But i also have no idea what you mean. ovaries produce hormones. cysts are probably a result of insufficient or overabundance of a specific hormone. but i'm not entirely educated on cysts so i don't know. but i don't believe cysts themselves don't produce hormones. Unless i'm completely wrong here and someone could chime in and correct me. I'm not educated enough on the topic. > julie > > > > > > > > > > > I have to celebrate. Just got back from the OB/GYN who took an ultrasound re-test of my ovaries. I was so ready to make the excuse that i didn't have my date book with me so i'd have to call to schedule the " biopsy " (if she suggested it) etc... but turns out, i dont' have to do anything at all... > > > > > > > > My right ovary showed 2 follicles which she said is probalby my ovulating ovary (since i'm back off the pill), and not concerned. > > > > > > > > My left ovary has ONE cyst, and it measures smaller than it did last year. last year it measured 2.4 cm in june and 2.3 in july and now it measures 2 cm. so it's shrinking. (hmmm...maybe iodine working very slowly?) > > > > > > > > the " eco-genic mass " that they had originally found last year, is not on any ovary. it's gone. > > > > > > > > Prior tests last year showed both ovaries had tons of follicles in them. i suspect it was due to my body trying to become regular post WP. I had that ultrasound done last year right around the time i was detoxing or just after detoxing the rest of the WP out of my body. so i think my ovaries just went berzerk. > > > > > > > > she " lightly " suggested a ca125, but only if i was concerned, but since i already had that test, and it was negative, i didn't opt for it. and she said since it was shrinking and I have no pain, not a big deal. She suggested we just retest in a year to see if it grows and thats it! > > > > > > > > YAY! i can go back to focusing on thryoid... > > > > > > > > i had to laugh when she said " but you need some form of birth control... " ya.... like i need a hole in the head. I'm 40 and married. Its not like I'm 15, without a husband or a job. I think i could handle a baby if there was an " accident. " (not likely tho, since we're careful.) > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 23, 2009 Report Share Posted April 23, 2009 " so for example, if your mom smoked while pregnant with you or ate a bunch of pesticides, you could have damaged follicles which don't produce enough E..... am I correct?? " Do you have a reference for that? Val -----Original Message----- From: rhythmicliving [mailto:rhythmicliving ] On Behalf Of christina Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 23, 2009 Report Share Posted April 23, 2009 http://health.usnews.com/usnews/health/healthday/071121/smoking-before-after-pre\ gnancy-harms-daughters-fertility.htm http://aje.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/kwm351v1 and there is this PCOS website... " Why Eggs Won't Pop and Progesterone Isn't Made But what causes dysfunctional follicles that won't release eggs? I am convinced, from wildlife studies and from what I have observed in my practice, this is due to the exposure of female embryos to xenobiotics, environmental pollutants which chemically act like estrogen on the developing baby's tissues. When a female embryo develops in the womb, 500 to 800 thousand follicles are created, each enclosing an immature ovum. Studies show that the creation of ovarian follicles during this embryo stage is exquisitely sensitive to the toxicity of xenobiotics. When the mother is exposed to these chemicals, she experiences no apparent damage. But the baby she is carrying is far more susceptible, and these chemicals may damage a female embryo's ovarian follicles and make them dysfunctional; unable to complete ovulation or manufacture sufficient progesterone. This damage is not apparent until after puberty. " http://www.virginiahopkinstestkits.com/pcos.html this is a progesterone promoting website (maybe not the most solid reference) but thought the info about damaged follicles was interesting.. in addition, I don't understand why the " answer " to PCOS is to supplement with P instead of E to induce ovulation...and thus endogenous P. I don't have any of Vliet's books anymore (gave them to friends) but I seem to remember her always discussing the role of various pesticides/chemicals and smoking in regards to fertility as well. -christina -- In rhythmicliving , " Valarie " wrote: > > " so for example, if your mom smoked while pregnant with you or ate a bunch > of pesticides, you could have damaged follicles which don't produce enough > E..... am I correct?? " > > Do you have a reference for that? > > Val > > > -----Original Message----- > From: rhythmicliving [mailto:rhythmicliving ] > On Behalf Of christina > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 23, 2009 Report Share Posted April 23, 2009 http://health.usnews.com/usnews/health/healthday/071121/smoking-before-after-pre\ gnancy-harms-daughters-fertility.htm http://aje.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/kwm351v1 and there is this PCOS website... " Why Eggs Won't Pop and Progesterone Isn't Made But what causes dysfunctional follicles that won't release eggs? I am convinced, from wildlife studies and from what I have observed in my practice, this is due to the exposure of female embryos to xenobiotics, environmental pollutants which chemically act like estrogen on the developing baby's tissues. When a female embryo develops in the womb, 500 to 800 thousand follicles are created, each enclosing an immature ovum. Studies show that the creation of ovarian follicles during this embryo stage is exquisitely sensitive to the toxicity of xenobiotics. When the mother is exposed to these chemicals, she experiences no apparent damage. But the baby she is carrying is far more susceptible, and these chemicals may damage a female embryo's ovarian follicles and make them dysfunctional; unable to complete ovulation or manufacture sufficient progesterone. This damage is not apparent until after puberty. " http://www.virginiahopkinstestkits.com/pcos.html this is a progesterone promoting website (maybe not the most solid reference) but thought the info about damaged follicles was interesting.. in addition, I don't understand why the " answer " to PCOS is to supplement with P instead of E to induce ovulation...and thus endogenous P. I don't have any of Vliet's books anymore (gave them to friends) but I seem to remember her always discussing the role of various pesticides/chemicals and smoking in regards to fertility as well. -christina -- In rhythmicliving , " Valarie " wrote: > > " so for example, if your mom smoked while pregnant with you or ate a bunch > of pesticides, you could have damaged follicles which don't produce enough > E..... am I correct?? " > > Do you have a reference for that? > > Val > > > -----Original Message----- > From: rhythmicliving [mailto:rhythmicliving ] > On Behalf Of christina > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 23, 2009 Report Share Posted April 23, 2009 I am eager to research the websites you offered. The theory sounds reasonable but I think there must be additional components as to why PCOS develops. I am the mother of 5 daughters. The oldest is 32 yrs old and was diagnosed with PCOS about 8yrs ago. She had hormone problems from the time she started her period(13yrs old)- we just didn't know what they meant. My other daughters aged 28,24,21,17 do not have those problems or PCOS.I would think the younger girls would have been exposed to many more estrogens in the environment than the older one, as the use of plastics as packaging has dramatically increased in their lifetime. I also never smoked and pesticide exposure was not markedly different in each case and I breast fed them all for 2yrs each, except the 21yr old only got a year and a half due to a new pregnancy. I am interested in your thoughts. Kate > > > > " so for example, if your mom smoked while pregnant with you or ate a bunch > > of pesticides, you could have damaged follicles which don't produce enough > > E..... am I correct?? " > > > > Do you have a reference for that? > > > > Val > > > > > > -----Original Message----- > > From: rhythmicliving [mailto:rhythmicliving ] > > On Behalf Of christina > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 23, 2009 Report Share Posted April 23, 2009 I am eager to research the websites you offered. The theory sounds reasonable but I think there must be additional components as to why PCOS develops. I am the mother of 5 daughters. The oldest is 32 yrs old and was diagnosed with PCOS about 8yrs ago. She had hormone problems from the time she started her period(13yrs old)- we just didn't know what they meant. My other daughters aged 28,24,21,17 do not have those problems or PCOS.I would think the younger girls would have been exposed to many more estrogens in the environment than the older one, as the use of plastics as packaging has dramatically increased in their lifetime. I also never smoked and pesticide exposure was not markedly different in each case and I breast fed them all for 2yrs each, except the 21yr old only got a year and a half due to a new pregnancy. I am interested in your thoughts. Kate > > > > " so for example, if your mom smoked while pregnant with you or ate a bunch > > of pesticides, you could have damaged follicles which don't produce enough > > E..... am I correct?? " > > > > Do you have a reference for that? > > > > Val > > > > > > -----Original Message----- > > From: rhythmicliving [mailto:rhythmicliving ] > > On Behalf Of christina > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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