Treatment Overview
Menopause is a natural change
that doesn't require treatment. But symptoms of hormonal change can be
difficult. If you have
insomnia, mood swings,
hot flashes, cloudy thinking,
heavy menstrual periods, or other menopause symptoms,
treatment can help you manage this transition more comfortably. As you review
your options, consider the following:
- Healthy lifestyle habits will help you reduce
menopause symptoms. These habits include eating a balanced diet; reducing
stress; getting regular exercise; and avoiding smoking, heavy caffeine, and
heavy alcohol use. An unhealthy lifestyle can make symptoms worse.
- Low-dose
hormone therapy (HT) or low-dose birth control pills
may be an option if you are still having periods and have multiple or severe
symptoms. Birth control pills aren't used after menopause because they contain
higher levels of hormones than women need.
- After menopause,
hormone therapy can be used as a
short-term treatment for severe symptoms when taken in
as low a dose as possible.
- You may only need a specific treatment
for certain symptoms, such as hot flashes or vaginal dryness.
- Meditative breathing or supplements such as black cohosh or soy
may help relieve symptoms.
Research has led to a big change in how doctors use
hormone therapy after menopause. For a long time,
estrogen-progestin, or hormone replacement therapy
(HRT), was thought to protect against heart disease or dementia. But
studies now show that HRT use can cause serious health problems in a small
number of women. These health problems include dangerous blood clots, stroke,
heart disease, breast cancer, ovarian cancer, and dementia.5, 6, 7 The heart
disease risk does not seem to affect women during their first 10 years after
menopause.8
Average HRT- and ERT-related
risks are low among the general population of women. But your
personal risk that hormone therapy may stimulate breast cancer, ovarian
cancer, cardiovascular problems, blood clots, or neurological changes may be
lower or higher, depending on your risk factors for those health problems.
Treatment options for menopause symptoms
Hot flashes.Meditative breathing exercises (paced respiration)
have been shown to reduce hot flashes.9 Medicines that
can improve hot flashes include
short-term, low-dose hormone therapy,
antidepressants, the high blood pressure medicine
clonidine, and the antiseizure medicine
gabapentin (Neurontin).10, 11
Heavy
periods. The hormone
progestin can help relieve
heavy menstrual bleeding caused by very low or very
high progesterone levels (after you have an exam to rule out other possible
causes). Other options include
nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), the
levonorgestrel (LNg) IUD, or birth control pills. For
severe blood loss, some women choose permanent surgical treatment. These
options include removing the uterus (hysterectomy)
or using heat energy to damage and scar the wall of the uterus (endometrial ablation). For more information, see the
topic
Dysfunctional Uterine Bleeding.
Vaginal dryness and irritation. A vaginal lubricant can help
with dryness.
Low-dose vaginal estrogen can help if your symptoms
are thin skin, dryness, and/or irritation. Less estrogen is absorbed into your
system with vaginal use, so the risks associated with ERT are less likely.
Multiple or severe symptoms.Hormone therapy can relieve multiple or difficult
menopause symptoms. For symptom relief before menopause,
low-dose estrogen-progestin birth control pills or
low-dose HRT (estrogen-progestin) can reduce heavy
menstrual bleeding and other symptoms. After menopause, low-dose HRT is an
option. Also, for severe symptoms that don't improve with estrogen-progestin,
there is an
estrogen-testosterone therapy. But testosterone is not
FDA-approved for women, because it is not yet well studied. Talk to your doctor
about
short-term HRT along with checkups every 6 months.
Bioidentical hormone replacement therapy (BHRT) is an
alternative to HRT. But it has not been well studied. The hormones are made in
a laboratory from wild yams or soy. BHRT is thought to be more similar to
human-produced hormones than synthetic HRT is. (Well-designed studies have not
yet proved this theory.12) But bioidentical HRT may
carry the same heart, stroke, blood clot, breast cancer, ovarian cancer, and
dementia risks that are linked to traditional HRT. Any form of hormone therapy,
including BHRT, is best taken for as short a period as possible after
menopause.
Should I use hormone replacement therapy
(HRT)?
Testosterone is sometimes used to increase sexual
desire in postmenopausal women who have low testosterone. But the U.S. Food and
Drug Administration (FDA) has not approved testosterone treatment for this
purpose. There is no testosterone product that comes in doses that are right
for women. Studies of testosterone in women have not lasted longer than 6
months.13 FDA experts want to know more about
long-term risks before they approve testosterone for use by females.
If you have a problem with low sexual desire, consider that most sexual
problems in women relate to such things as relationship troubles, depression,
or medicine side effects. For more information, see the topic
Sexual Problems in Women.
Other treatment options
Women may also try
alternative medicine to relieve menopause symptoms. These alternatives may
include
black
cohosh (Remifemin) or
dietary soy. For more information about alternative
treatments, see the Other Treatment section.