Chiropractic Sports Institute - A Professional Corporation Sports Institute
A Professional Corporation

Site Navigation












Reference Area













Other Areas of Interest






Westlake Office Moorpark Office CSI Mobile Online Store CSI Blog

C.S.I. Reference Articles

Hormone Replacement, Something To Think About

3:11 PM PST - 11/28/2007
by: Terry Weyman, D.C., C.C.S.P.

With new shows such as extreme make over and other vanity based shows, make sure before you look at the outside, look first to the inside. According to a new report, Estrogen-alone hormone therapy increased postmenopausal women’s risk of stroke and blood clots, decreased their risk of hip and other fractures and had no effect on their risk of heart disease, breast cancer, and colon cancer. These findings appeared in the April 14 issue of The Journal of the American Medicine Association (JAMA).

The WHI estrogen-alone study, conducted at 40 clinical centers across the U.S., involved 10,739 generally healthy postmenopausal women ages 50-79 who did not have a uterus. Half of the women received 0.625 mg/day of conjugated equine estrogens (Premarin™), and half received a placebo.

This study was stopped early in February 2004, because early findings showed the hormone increased the risk of stroke and did not reduce the risk of heart disease, a key question of the study.

In July 2002, a separate WHI study of estrogen plus progestin among postmenopausal women with a uterus was also stopped early because of increased risks of breast cancer, heart disease, stroke and blood clots, which outweighed the benefits of a reduced risk of hip fracture and colon cancer.

“These new findings are not great news for women,” says Cheryl Ritenbaugh, PhD, principal investigator for WHI at Kaiser Permanente’s Center for Health Research, “but they are certainly better for some women than the estrogen plus progestin findings two years ago.

“Women in their 50’s with hysterectomies who are taking estrogen-alone for relief of menopausal symptoms may feel heartened to hear that there is no increased risk of breast cancer from estrogen-alone. Certainly estrogen does not prevent most chronic diseases, but the safety concerns raised by the estrogen-alone are much smaller than those raised by the estrogen plus progestin results.”

National guidelines for estrogen plus progestin and estrogen-alone are that women should not take these hormones for preventing diseases, especially heart disease. The recommendation is that hormone therapy should only be used to treat menopausal symptoms and used at the smallest effective dose for the shortest possible time. Before choosing any form of therapy educate yourself, speak openly with your Doctor and research your options.


Back to TopBack to Top