• 08Nov

    No-one likes the smell of body odor, but did you know…

    • Body odor, or BO, is caused by sweat mixing with bacteria on the skin.
    • Some foods and drink, such as spicy foods, caffeine and alcohol, can make BO smell worse.
    • Sweating is your body’s way of cleansing itself and keeping it cool.
    • Body odor is also called bromhidrosis.
    • There are 2.5 million sweat glands in the body, 80% of which are in the armpits.
    • Gorillas give off a pungent body odor when they’re distressed.
    • Body odor can change during the menopause.

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  • 12Mar

    Every woman experiences the period called menopause or climax. It is the specific period in women life when estrogen development by ovaries terminates. Usually it comes at 50 years of age. Objectively it is revealed by estrogen level decrease in blood and menstrual periods termination. Generally the process is individual. Every woman experiences it in a different way. At the average the physiological process starts in women of 45-50 years of age and depends on various factors. Heredity plays a big role. Menopause may start earlier or later.

    Menopause is characterized by full termination of female sexual hormones development in the female organism, menstrual cycle disorders (change in discharge amount), change in mucous of vagina (dryness), and uterus reduction. A word ‘menopause’ literally translated from Latin means ‘end of menstrual bleeding.’

    Symptoms of menopause may appear about 51 years of age, but may be experienced earlier. The early beginning of menopause does not mean anything, just your organism feature. But women should be prepared for this process physically and morally. For this purpose it is better know some symptoms to reveal the beginning of menopause. Continue reading »

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  • 05Mar

    Climax is not a disease or disorder of the organism. Menopause is a transient state between two life stages of women when menstrual bleeding terminates. Various symptoms testify about hormonal changes during menopause. If consider menopause signs, the first is the age. Menopause occurs in certain age, therefore knowing approximate period we can compare to other signs and realize that menopause has come. The exact age of climax is impossible to define, because the processes responsible for ovaries activity have not been studied yet. Also we can say that this process occurs individually, but certain average time frames of menopause coming can be defined. It is the age of 45-56 years. However, as it was told above, it can be observed individually, earlier or later. The shorter time intervals between menstrual periods can be the first sign of menopause approaching. During menopause, menstrual periods come unexpectedly.

    Before climax bone density and cholesterol level are decreased leading to cardiovascular diseases. The following first signs can testify about menopause: mood swings, depression, chronic weakness, headaches, change of menstrual cycle, pain, spasms, blood sugar fluctuations, body water retention, sleep disorder, low libido, painful urination and skin ageing. Continue reading »

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  • 19Feb

    Every woman experiences the specific period called menopause or climax. Menopause is a period in women characterized by disorder of estrogen hormones release. These hormones define activity of ovaries and hypophysis. Usually this process starts in the female organism after the age of 45 to 55 years, and its average duration is from 4 to 8 years.

    Menopause does not come in one moment, this process is complicated physically and psychologically. Generally the female organism has enough time to prepare for a new stage of the life because the process lasts for long and categorized by certain stages which help to manage with these changes.

    Menopause is divided into three stages: pre-menopause (from the beginning of lowering ovaries function to menopause), menopause (the last menstrual periods), and post-menopause (from the end of the last menstrual periods to the end of the life cycle). The process occurs gradually and woman is getting used to changes without serious affecting. But very often women feel menopause depression.

    The scientists have been trying for over the century to find correlation between menopause and depression. The physiological and psychological changes observed during menopause depression have not been studied yet. Many mood swings are caused by estrogen deficiency, however it is not always like this, so it cannot be explained by the specific factors. Menopause was always associated with the period when women are especially sensitive to mental disorders. However, psychological disorders depend on various factors. Very often these disorders are related to early menopause. Early menopause may arise due to many reasons, for example: surgeries, ovaries functionality lowering, diseases, and many other disorders. Continue reading »

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  • 12Feb

    If men hardly survive the beginning of the middle-age-crisis, the end of it is far harder for women. Women feel approaching the middle age more sensually. Significant changes are going in the female organism. If say more precisely this is an approaching menopause (climax). This physiological process is specific and though it is inevitable for every woman in certain age, but it is discussed not too much. Women can tell, for example, about their marriage, divorce, facial surgery, their preferences in sex and drug addiction, even about their body weight. But they never tell about approach menopause.

    Menopause is an exact undeniable symptom of age. When this period is approaching, life of women starts to be changed. Though healthy food, sport activity and good gens protect your appearance, you do not lose your attraction, you look healthy, nevertheless, approaching menopause, most likely, makes you to remember many terrible stories associated with this period of the life.

    Climax is a physiological state of the woman’s organism when a hormonal background is changed, ovary and hypophysis functionality is lowered. Main clinical symptom of climax is the menstrual flow termination. Many women consider this process as very negative and with its approaching are getting upset, but some woman on the contrary are happy to this change of their life and thereafter they are busy and full of joyful life. But this depends on many factors: the process, the organism tolerance, symptoms, and also a menopause age plays a very important role. Continue reading »

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  • 02Feb

    Every woman reaches a certain period in her life when she feels she is getting older and her body shows all signs of this process. Except usual ageing of the organism, women experience such physiological process as menopause.

    Menopause is a normal physiological process in certain age in all women. So, having reached the certain age, every woman passes this process that changes her further life. Menopause is one of physiological processes affecting the whole organism. This process is called climax that means from Greek a ‘step’ to a new life because it is a period of numerous changes. Menopause is characterized by female estrogen hormones development disorder. The doctors call this process the full termination of menstrual periods. During menopause the hormonal background is changed, ovaries and hypophysis functionality is decreased leading to menstrual periods termination, change of vagina mucous (dryness), and uterus reduction.

    Menopause, except hormonal background change, is characterized by the most unpleasant property, ageing. Really, menopause is a synonym of ageing of women. Menopause starts usually in women at the age of 45-50 years and depends on different factors. Sometimes menopause may start earlier or later. Some women are afraid of approaching menopause and consider these changing as something horrible, some women, on the contrary, face the changes as a new stage of the life. Every woman considers this physiological process and this stage in different way according to her opinion. Continue reading »

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  • 15Apr

    acupunctureMenopause is a time of change and new opportunity. It can also be a time of challenge as the sweats and hot flashes so commonly experienced by women during this phase in their life must be dealt with. As more women choose to forgo hormonal therapy and face menopause naturally, nonprescription remedies are needed to help women get through this time comfortably. A natural hot flash remedy that has recently been studied is the use of acupuncture for treatment of sweating and hot flashes. Is acupuncture good for menopausal symptoms?

    A study recently published in the medical journal Menopause looked at the role acupuncture may play in relieving the sweating and hot flashes associated with menopause. Postmenopausal women with symptoms of sweating and hot flashes were randomized to three treatment groups. One group received standard care, but no acupuncture. The second group received sham acupuncture in which they thought they were receiving acupuncture but only shallow needling was used. A third group received traditional Chinese medicine acupuncture. After two months of twice weekly therapy, the frequency of sweating and hot flashes experienced by the women were quantified. The results? The group receiving the sham acupuncture as well as the group receiving actual acupuncture both had a reduction in the frequency of sweating and hot flashes. In contrast, the usual care group did not.

    Continue reading »

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  • 07Apr

    In history, menopause and aging have not always been viewed negatively.  Women often greeted the absence of their period gladly; welcoming a time when they would be free of the burden of childbearing, their time and energy liberated for new things.  Many cultures have revered wise old women. They were sought out for healing or guidance. Not so in our times.  Now it is a put down to call something an old wives tale! It’s a way of saying that something is false, frivolous, or foolish.

    First of all, are you really in menopause?  Menopause is defined as the end of your period.  For several years before that happens you will likely experience symptoms of perimenopause, which is the time when your hormones start wildly fluctuating, and your period becomes irregular.  Kind of like being a teenager again, only with wrinkles.

    In modern culture menopause is viewed as a medical condition which can be treated.  Current treatments often include hormone replacement therapy, or HRT.   HRT can ease symptoms of menopause such as irritability, anxiety, memory loss, or skin or hair changes.  HRT has also been connected with reduced risk of heart disease and osteoporosis; and can help if you experience vaginal dryness or loss of sexual desire.  But there are risks that have been associated with HRT too.  Some studies have shown a connection to breast cancer, blood clots, high blood pressure and gall bladder disease.  The trend these days is to use HRT for a short focused period of treatment, rather than a long term one, to address the most bothersome and persistent symptoms of menopause, the ones you really cannot live with.

    There are many alternative and natural therapies to try if you feel you need help calming the beast.  The first time you feel like Krakatoa getting ready to blow; that you feel puffy, flushed faced and damp, and everyone else looks slender and cool as a cuke; or that you’re jotting your name down and you have to pause for a moment,  to think what it is; you may decide it’s time to explore your options.  It’s actually a great time to think of the wisdom passed on by our ancestors. Our great grandmothers learned about beneficial plants at grandmother’s knee.  Today we can go to the bookstore, health food store, or the internet to find healthy products that are good for menopausal symptoms.

    Continue reading »

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  • 06Apr

    Joanne M. Friedman

    Forget what your mother taught you.  When my mother reached “that certain age”, the whole family held its collective breath.  I have no idea whether she endured hot flashes or vaginal dryness—not the sort of thing we talked about over dinner in the ‘50’s.  The mood swings, obvious aberrations in an otherwise calm view of life, were blamed on us kids who couldn’t seem to avoid enraging her at one moment and bringing her to sappy tears the next.  If there was medication available, she wasn’t taking it.

    Skip forward to the turn of the New Millennium, and it was my turn.  But the calendar wasn’t the only place a big change could be seen.  Boomer women began flashing hot and cold all over the country.  Information on peri-menopause and the real deal was everywhere.  Gail Sheehy turned her talents from tracking the basic life changes in Passages to taking a round shot at “The Change” in The Silent Passage, and I got the full benefit of the new openness on a closed subject.  Not only was there ample coverage of the physiological basics available everywhere, but there were ways to help one round the bend with style and without alienating adults and frightening children.

    Perhaps the most important tidbit we learned was that menopause is the end of only one (not very popular) part of the overall process of our lives.  Where my older acquaintances fluttered handkerchiefs over their sweaty chests and whimpered about not being “real women” as their reproductive powers dwindled, my generation wrapped those hankies around our heads and went bicycling.  For us the advent of goodies like HRT (hormone replacement therapy), hormone-infused suppositories, and high-tech lubricants were just what the doctor ordered to ward off the discomfort of thinning vaginal tissues and those exciting mood swings.

    Some of us lucky ones responded well to herbal treatments.  I was not prone to serious hot flashes, but the mood swings were enough to send co-workers into duck-and-cover under their desks.  Though not everyone responds to all herbals, I got by with regular doses of St. Johns’ Wort and a growing appreciation of the calming effects of yoga.  Suddenly life was good.  Better than good, life was great!  The down side to menopause—the loss of reproductive viability—becomes a huge plus when the other issues are kept at bay.  Wait a bit and worries about pregnancy become a thing of the past, opening the door to excellent times.  Apply creams and ointments judiciously, and take targeted multi-vitamins, and you’ll find there’s a whole new life around that bend.

    Add to the mix one of the largest psychological effects of aging—the ability to cease caring what other people think while simultaneously becoming sensitive to and totally involved in the community at large—and you’ve got one heady experience.

    Only one caveat needs to be addressed.  It is far too easy to enjoy the post-menopause years too much, to become insufferable to your friends and family as you boldly go where you never before thought you could.  Apply the freedom confidently but with a light hand and keep up with regular physical checkups to avoid being flattened by a mid-life ailment.  High blood pressure comes with the package for many women, but it’s usually easily controlled by diet, medication and exercise.  Cholesterol levels can fluctuate widely and bone density can suffer.  Heart disease can rear its ugly head.  Again, lifestyle changes will help greatly, but the care of a caring physician is vital to the process.

    With a little careful management, peri- and post-menopause can shift from “that time” to Your Time in no time.

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  • 05Apr

    You’re not crazy! You’re not dying! You’re a woman! Menopause is one of those evil words women pretend not to hear. While menopause is a natural process for the female body, it typically gets a bad rap. The good news is that no one is alone. Menopause happens to every woman on the face of the earth. It simply signals the end of fertility, not the end of energy or vibrance. In order to come to terms with menopause, it is important to understand what the big fuss is all about.

    Physical Changes

    Menopause usually comes with a set of physical symptoms. While it would be nice to just merrily skip through the change of life without a hitch, it simply isn’t realistic. With menopause comes some unwelcome physical changes. Among those include night sweats and hot flashes, vaginal dryness, sleep irregularity, thinning hair, weight gain, diminishing bone density, decreased sexual appetite, and drying skin. It sounds pleasant right? Fortunately, it’s not all gloom and doom. Some women find it quite liberating to be able to have intercourse without the use of birth control.

    Emotional Changes

    Emotional changes also take place during menopause. Things such as mood swings, anxiety, and a feeling of loss may be directly related to hormone shifts. These changes, however, may also be directly related to the physical changes associated with menopause. For instance, anxiety may be caused by a lack of sleep. There aren’t many people who could get through a sleepless night without a mood shift.

    Perimenopause

    Women can experience menopause symptoms as much as 8 years before the end of fertility. It is just the body’s ways of making the transition into menopause. This is called perimenopause. During this time menstrual cycles tend to be irregular. Some women even experience hot flashes. Isn’t it great to be a woman!

    Continue reading »

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