Buy Natural Progesterone Cream
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Natural progesterone pills are also available. However, the liver breaks down progesterone quickly, so less becomes available to the bloodstream. A person would have to take much more oral progesterone than they would if they chose to apply the progesterone cream.
With natural progesterone, you may notice some changes and symptoms like breast tenderness, headaches, and depression. But these symptoms are generally more associated with synthetic progesterone. If you do experience these symptoms, they generally go away as you continue taking natural progesterone.
Be sure to patch test with topical creams before applying it all over your body. To patch test, place a little cream inside your wrist and wait 24 hours to see if you develop an allergic reaction, like itching, redness, or swelling.
Natural progesterone could be a way for some women to boost their levels without having to experience the unwanted side effects of synthetic hormones. Many women are interested to increase their progesterone levels to help with fertility and to decrease menopause symptoms.
**United States Pharmacopoeia (USP) denotes a recognized standard of purity and strength. It is sometimes referred to as \"human-identical\" or \"bio-identical\" progesterone, which differentiates it from synthetic progestins or progestogens. USP classifies this progesterone as the highest quality available.**Our natural progesterone is formulated from a substance found in Mexican wild yams.
1 full pump dispenses about 1.2g of cream, providing 20mg of USP Progesterone. This container yields approximately 70 pumps. Rotate application between abdomen, hands, and thighs. For external use only. The following are recommendations that should be confirmed or modified in concert with your health care provider.
Women in their reproductive years:*These are only SUGGESTED use. Every woman finds the right balance for herself. We suggest starting with our recommendations and working from there. Progesterone cream is best used during the second half of your menstrual cycle, for the two weeks prior to menstruation. Day 1 is the first day of bleeding.Days 1 - 14: do not use progesterone cream.Days 15 - 28: use one pump twice a day.The suggested use is based on a 28-day cycle. If your cycle is shorter or longer you may need to adjust the timing of use, earlier or later than day 15, to fit with ovulation. If your period begins early, STOP using progesterone cream while you are bleeding. Count the first day of bleeding as day one, and begin the cycle again. If you use the progesterone cream prior to ovulation, you could possibly suppress ovulation that cycle.Caution: Not for use while pregnant or breastfeeding. Should you find out you are pregnant while using this product, seamlessly switch to a pure natural progesterone cream product and contact your doctor for directions on continued use.
On his recommendations, I used natural progesterone cream. Dr. Leeclaimed that it is impossible to overdose on the transdermal cream, andthat there are no significant side effects. At first, I believed him.
of progesterone I used per day was between 20-30mg, split betweenmorning and evening doses. When I first took the cream, beginning inMay 2003, I felt great. In fact, I had more energy and ability to loseweight than I had in about five years. I didn't need near as much sleep,and found that I no longer struggled with depression.
in my legs, and then a lump of swelling, bruising, and localized sorenessin my calf which just got worse. That ended up being the first of twoepisodes with venous blood clots in the six months I was on the cream.Little did I know that progesterone is heavily implicated in clottingdisorders, much as the Pill is. Not one of my doctors ever made theconnection between my blood clots and the progesterone.
We also noticed that my \"resting\" heart rate was going through theroof.One day when I had been on the cream about two months, we stoppedat a blood pressure machine, and my heart rate (while wanderingaimlessly around a store) was over 120! There were several times whenmy heart felt like it was pounding out of my chest. I kept putting thisdown to thyroid trouble. As a doctor in LA told me later, \"Yes, nowonder you were losing weight...at the expense of your heart!\"
feeling overtly depressed (that I was aware of), I would burst out cryingat the strangest times, and a lot more frequently than ever before. Istarted feeling overwhelmed and annoyed by things that used to be nobig deal. My temper got shorter with the kids and with my husband.This feeling crept up on me a little at a time, but it began to get worseand worse. I now realize, from extensive reading about the actions ofprogesterone, that this is typical for a large segment of those usinghormones.
When I couldn't stop throwing up and couldn't eat and it had beenthreeweeks - that was when I ran across the first doctor who said, \"Well, ifthere's one thing I know that makes pregnant women sick as dogs, it'sprogesterone. I'd look there first, if you want to know why you can'tstop vomiting.\" I quit the cream on October 26, 2003.
The bad news, which I got soon after, was that progesterone creambuilds up in the tissues and takes anywhere from three to six months tobe cleared by the body. This timeline ended up being almost exactlytrue for me. I was sick, sick, sick until about two weeks ago.
The symptoms during those six months of illness as I rebounded fromthe cream are almost too many to list, but they include: severe nauseaand vomiting, gastro-intestinal problems (marked heartburn, bouts ofdiarrhea, and bouts of constipation), uncontrollable shaking, acne andextremely oily skin, hirtuism, depression, anxiety, tingling/burningsensations on the back of my arms, neck, and head, insomnia, hyper-sensitivity to medications and foods, hot flashes, and serious withdrawalsymptoms. To my great relief, most all of these issues have finally,completely resolved. Today, only the insomnia remains.
promoted so heavily, so easily available, so inexpensive, and so readilyabsorbed. The real problem is several-fold in my opinion. It is difficulttoget an exact individual dose. Because it does relieve a number ofsymptoms of estrogen dominance, I am sure that some use more thanthey should. But the most insidious problem comes from long-term use.Many women who use a topical progesterone product end up having itaccumulate in their tissues. It then can release into the blood stream atvery high levels . And we see this high-level release occur for monthsafter the patient quits application...\"
Neither blood serum nor saliva tests are accurately revealing thehighlevels of progesterone that the creams can cause. Many women - andI'm one of them - show up in these tests as having LOW progesteronelevels even when their bodies have become toxic due to overdose! Thisreally threw my doctors off the trail. They wanted to put me backON progesterone, but thankfully I was never willing.
Lots of researchers seem to be catching on to the fact that naturalprogesterone can be anything but harmless. The following informationwas released last week by the American Society of ClinicalPharmacologists:
I realize this letter is long, but if one woman is spared the miseryIendured, it will be worth sharing what happened. I hope that more andmore people will seriously reconsider their advocacy and use ofhormones, whether \"natural\" or not.
The progesterone in these creams can effectively travel through the skin and into the bloodstream, according to research. In one study, menopausal women used 40 milligrams of cream twice daily, placing it on their arm, thigh, breast, or abdomen. Their blood levels of progesterone were as high as when they took progesterone capsules by mouth.
Many plants make compounds similar to progesterone which may or may not function like the purified progesterone chemical. The progesterone in creams bought without a prescription is made by processing ingredients from plants, such as yams.
Progesterone cream does not work immediately. How long it takes to work depends on several factors, including how much progesterone your body needs. Early research shows it could take between 24 and 48 weeks of using progesterone cream daily to see improvements in menopause symptoms.
You can apply the cream to your neck, inner thigh, forearm, lower abdomen, or vaginal area. If you are using another hormone on your skin, like testosterone, don't apply the progesterone cream to the same part of the body.
Low levels of the hormone progesterone may indicate infertility or irregular ovulation. Some research shows that using progesterone cream may boost fertility in women undergoing in vitro fertilization.
The progesterone used in creams comes from diosgenin, a plant-based estrogen. This hormone is naturally found in wild yam and soy. The diosgenin is chemically converted to progesterone in a lab. That progesterone is then used to make progesterone cream.
Some companies try to promote wild yam products as natural progesterone \"boosters.\" Despite these claims, your body can't convert diosgenin found in wild yam into active progesterone. Avoid these products.
Benster B, Carey A, Wadsworth F, Vashisht A, Domoney C, Studd J. A double-blind placebo-controlled study to evaluate the effect of progestelle progesterone cream on postmenopausal women. Menopause Int. 2009;15(2):63-9. doi:10.1258/mi.2009.009014
Hermann AC, Nafziger AN, Victory J, Kulawy R, Rocci ML, Bertino JS. Over-the-counter progesterone cream produces significant drug exposure compared to a food and drug administration-approved oral progesterone product. J Clin Pharmacol. 2005;45(6):614-9. doi:10.1177/0091270005276621 59ce067264
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