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Danish HRT study

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Hello, ruby,

Your reference to the Danish study of almost 700,000 Danish women, many of them

using BHRT, is just what I needed. I had no idea that another huge study of HRT

had been done anywhere since the WHI study, let alone with bioidentical

hormones.

I am due to talk to my dr in three days about my next step in HRT. Ordinarily

she's open to cyclical BHRT, but because of the uterine polyps I just had

removed she thinks static HRT might be better for now. Her rationale is --

actually, I'm not sure what her rationale is. I didn't understand it, so I

forgot it.

Anyway, the Danish study supports my preference for cyclical BHRT. I think I'll

propose using Vivelle all the time and oral Prometrium for about half the month.

I'll see what my dr thinks of that.

>

> Subject: " This Just In... "

> To: rhythmicliving

> Date: Thursday, October 2, 2008, 12:13 PM

> extracted from larger article at:

> http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/10/081001093504.htm

>

> Hormone Replacement Therapy And Heart Attack Risk:

> Danish Study Provides New Information

>

> ScienceDaily (Oct. 2, 2008) — It's not what you take

> but the way that

> you take it that can produce different results in women who

> take

> hormone replacement therapy (HRT), according to new

> research on the

> association between HRT and heart attacks, published online

> in

> Europe's leading cardiology journal, the European Heart

> Journal...

>

> ...The study also found that the type of HRT and the way

> that the

> women took it made a difference to the risk of heart

> attacks.

> Continuous HRT (a continuous combination of oestrogen and

> progesterone) carried a 35% increased risk of heart attacks

> compared

> with women who had never used HRT.

>

> But if HRT was taken on a cyclical basis (oestrogen,

> followed by a

> combination of oestrogen and progesterone) there was a

> tendency for

> these women to have a reduced risk of heart attacks

> compared to women

> who had never used HRT, and this was also seen if a

> synthetic

> hormone, tibolone, was used. If the method of taking the

> oestrogen

> was via a patch or gel on the skin or in the vagina, the

> risk of

> heart attack reduced by more than a third (38% and 44%

> respectively).

>

> ~ ruby ~

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