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Here's what the FDA's hormone therapy update means for menopause treatment and women's health
Hormone replacement therapy, or HRT, was the first menopause treatment available to women, approved by the FDA in 1941. It ...
Hormone replacement therapy (HRT) does not increase breast cancer risk in BRCA1/BRCA2 carriers, with estrogen-alone formulations showing a lower risk. The study used a matched-pair design to control ...
Menopause can turn daily life upside down. But now, the black box warning on some helpful medication has been removed.
New research has found “no evidence” that commonly prescribed hormone therapies for menopausal women either increase or ...
After decades when menopausal women were steered away from hormone therapy due to breast cancer concerns, new evidence shows it may be right for some.
Menopause can feel overwhelming as hormones wreak havoc, but you don’t have to endure it alone. According to Dr Kaushal, modern medicine offers hope with HRT.
Hormone replacement therapy (HRT) has come a long way. After decades of confusion, following a widely cited but flawed 2002 study advising against its use, its reputation as a potentially ...
There is little evidence that HRT causes people to gain weight. Weight gain during menopause has more to do with the changes in metabolism than whether a person takes HRT. Hormone replacement therapy ...
Hormone replacement therapy (HRT) patches have to be applied below the waist because they absorb more effectively into body areas with more fatty tissue, such as the lower abdomen, thighs, and ...
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