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Part 1 of 5 (Part
2, Part 3, Part
4, Part 5)
Tim
O'Shea
Before researching the topic of estrogen,
I admit my initial preconceptions about hormone replacement
therapy for menopause were less than brightness and trust.
The usual pattern seems to be:
-
research
studies funded by the same companies who propose to sell
the drugs
-
no
conclusive positive results from controlled, randomized
clinical trials
-
A
Drug In Search of a Market
-
major
side effects from the new drug therapy that are chalked
up to the "disease" itself
Guess I'm jaded. So sue me.
Trying to prove my preconceptions wrong, the research failed
me. Anyone can see how the whole thing was set up. Now this
chapter is not light reading, even though I tried. But if
you are a woman, you need to read the whole thing. After
that, you're on your own.
Drug Hoax Phenomena Are
Not New
The same thing happened in the Boer War (Hadwen), in the
Philippines in 1905 (Hume, p 200), and in Desert Storm.
Mass administration of drugs that killed many more people
than they saved. The difference here is that today the control
of information has become much more sophisticated, the focus
being trust your doctor, trust your doctor - you really
don't have to understand the details.
The target is the 30 million menopausal American women,
and the game is the $1 billion HRT industry, a vertically
integrated boom market.
Here's The Basic Story
Since the 1930s, American women have been trained and bullied
into thinking that a natural normal event in their life
- menopause - is a disease condition requiring treatment.
Let's stop with that for a minute.
If it's a disease, how did all the millions of women throughout
history up to the present time muddle through it? How do
Third World women or non-HMO lifestyles survive the ordeal?
Keep those two questions in mind when you read anything
mainstream, either advertising or articles.
The "new" "medical condition" requires
drug therapy, which coincidentally has just recently been
"discovered": synthetic estrogen - hormone replacement
therapy. Does it work? Are women better off now? Does it
really prevent osteoporosis? Read on!
What Is Menopause?
Menopause is a period of years in a normal woman's life
in which gradual hormonal changes bring about a shift away
from the physical powers of childbearing, in favor of a
more mature condition of mental development and wisdom.
The unpleasant symptoms we have come to associate with menopause
are common only in a small group of women in history: American
and Northern European women in the past 75 years. Outside
that group, menopause is not so problematic and is taken
more in stride as a natural phase in a woman's life, with
little fanfare. It seems that the more simple the lifestyle,
and the more simple the diet - the more effortless the transition.
Throughout history, simple diet has been a function of low
income. The most nutritious foods are the least expensive:
whole fruits and vegetables, unprocessed dairy, whole grains.
As lifestyle became more complex, and incomes grew, expensive,
empty, processed, nutrient-deficient foods were popularized
by marketing and advertising - the foods of commerce. (Royal
Lee)
Less need to exercise, more focus on money, greater stress
- the basic formula for the rise of the most resistant group
of diseases in history : the degenerative diseases. Heart
disease, cancer, arthritis, diabetes, osteoporosis - are
epidemic in our society, the richest nation in history.
Even 100 years ago such diseases were rare.
By now most of us have heard of a Shangri-La place in the
Himalayas called Hunza Land, famous for longevity to 120
years old. Two Americans, Dr. Allen Banik and Renee Taylor,
visited this isolated mountain civilization, one in 1958
and one in 1962.
Both wrote books describing their incredible experiences.
Both detail the simple diet as well as the lack of degenerative
diseases, and infectious diseases as well. Physically cut
off from the world by treacherous mountain passes, the Hunzas
developed their own agriculture system of stone terraces,
fed by the mineral rich waters of the glaciers. Hunza health
is probably unequalled anywhere in the world, or in history.
Symptoms of menopause were unheard of in Hunza Land.
In Japan as well as in many other cultures with basic, unrefined
diets, there is no word for "hot flashes." As
we shall see, the unpleasant symptoms of menopause are directly
related to the amount of estrogen a woman has maintained
during her adult life, prior to menopause.
Natural phytoestrogens (plant-estrogens) are found in plants
like licorice, soybeans, alfalfa, and many others, in very
small amounts. Phytoestrogens are weak estrogens and block
the stronger forms. A diet abundant in phytoestrogens before
menopause will do much to moderate the day-to-day estrogen
level so that when menopause arrives, there will not be
such big drop.
The Creation Of A Market:
How Did
the Whole HRT Thing Get Started In The First Place?
The story really begins in 1938 with the discovery of diethylstilbestrol
(DES) by Charles Dobbs. DES was supposed to be the first
"synthetic estrogen" - an oxymoron, as we shall
see. Dobbs first thought DES would solve the problems of
menopause, but the AMA immediately began to make extravagant
predictions for "preventing miscarriages" and
solving all problems of pregnancy as well. (Robbins, p138)
After many years, DES was being prescribed for a "safe
pregnancy" and to "prevent miscarriages."
By 1960 it was found that between 60 and 90% of DES daughters
had abnormal sex organs, leading to high rates of infertility,
miscarriages, and cervical cancer. (Sellman p28). DES sons
commonly had testicular dysfunctional and were often sterile.
As for the mothers who had taken DES, their risk of breast
cancer had been increased by 40%. (Meyers p 143) DES was
the first drug ever invented that could cause cancer in
the offspring when taken by the mother. (Reusch, p 22) But
still the drug wasn't taken off the market until 1971! (
Kamen, p99). By that time the industry didn't need DES any
more for its bottom line, because ERT was off and running.
Next Contestant
Public attention was then diverted away from the disasters
of DES by a 1966 best seller called Feminine Forever, by
Robert Wilson, a New York gynecologist. Wilson's thesis
was that menopause is an estrogen-deficiency disease. All
the unpleasant symptoms which accompany menopause were the
simple result of too little estrogen. Insufficient estrogen
supposedly caused a woman to lose her youth, beauty, cheerful
attitude, and bone density all at once, with the onset of
menopause.
Not missing a beat, the drug industry immediately donated
$1.3 million to set up the Wilson Foundation for the sole
purpose of developing and promoting estrogen drugs. The
usual story: limited studies with inconclusive results,
skewing results to please the company that was paying for
the trials, discontinuing studies that weren't turning out
"right" ...
The primary study that was the basis for vaulting synthetic
estrogen into the limelight, originally as a contraceptive,
was a small, flawed trial done in Puerto Rico, in which
20% of the 132 women suffered serious side effects. Five
of them died.
Negatives were swept under the carpet as irrelevant - the
main thing was that the new wonder drug supposedly cancelled
the "horrible" symptoms of menopause - hot flashes,
vaginal dryness, migraines, etc. FDA approval for synthetic
estrogen was given based on this one study! (Marshall) Throughout
1964 and 1965, fueled by the advertising power of the biggest
clients, articles appeared in major women's magazines, like
Vogue, Cosmopolitan, and Good Housekeeping proclaiming a
breakthrough that would finally set women free from the
ravages of the dread menopause. (Lee p24)
Within a few years, with no real proof that Wilson was right,
with superficial clinical trials, synthetic estrogen was
being popularly prescribed, and a new industry was off and
running. They called it Estrogen Replacement Therapy. Better
living through chemistry.
A Little Snag Came Up
In 1975
The New England Journal of Medicine (Dec 1975 p.1199) published
its findings after studying the causes of endometrial cancer.
They showed that women who took the new estrogen drugs had
just increased their risk of endometrial cancer by a factor
of five times. Unless they had been using the drugs longer
than seven years. Then it was 14 times the normal incidence.
Sales slowed
Yankee ingenuity to the rescue: it was found, though not
conclusively, that rates of endometrial cancer could be
reduced if synthetic progesterone were added to the synthetic
estrogen. Synthetic progesterones are called progestins.
So they changed the name from Estrogen Replacement Therapy
to Hormone Replacement Therapy, and the show went on. Sales
climbed back up, and then continued to grow. And grow.
With similar results to the 1975 study, 20 years later the
American Cancer Society conducted a huge 13-year study of
some 240,000 postmenopausal women to find the relation between
HRT and cancer. Their findings: 40% higher incidence of
ovarian cancer; after 11 years of HRT, the figure went to
70%! (Rodriguez)
How Could This Be?
As the HRT industry gained strength, the manufacturers began
to make additional claims about the benefits of HRT, claims
that were again unsupported by solid research:
-
HRT
could prevent osteoporosis
-
HRT
could prevent heart disease
The underlying, and unproven, assumption
of this new "therapy" - HRT - was that women's
lives were being improved now that they were spared the
horrors of aging, menopause, osteoporosis, and the loss
of femininity. Unfortunately, these promises are rarely
kept, and almost never because of a program of synthetic
hormones.
Worse, the side effects of HRT have proven to be a bigger
problem than what they were supposed to cure.
To begin to untangle this giant web of doubletalk and wrong
information, we have to look at some basic endocrinology:
Can't tell the hormones without a program. If this gets
too complicated for the attention-challenged, just skip
to the next section, but at least give it a try.
Hormones
They are chemical compounds that are players in the most
sophisticated and exquisitely balanced internet in the entire
body: the endocrine system. This group of glands, including
the adrenals, the pituitary, the ovaries, the testes, the
thyroid, and the hypothalamus are interrelated in impossibly
complex ways, about which we're just beginning to get glimpses
of understanding.
It's a swirling universe of chemical elegance and precision,
involving millions of refined little molecular firings which
wink in and out of existence every second. "Touch one
strand and the whole web trembles," is the way endocrinologist
Deepak Chopra puts it. The endocrine system controls all
other systems of the body by means of chemical messengers,
who wait for an answer.
What
Is Estrogen?
Estrogen is a hormone, one of the moving parts of that
endocrine system. It is a steroid (made from cholesterol)
hormone, occurring in both men and women.
Estrogen's functions are primarily the growth and development
of sex organs and other tissues related to reproduction
(Guyton p1023)
For a basic overview of one little part of the endocrine
system, John Lee has a very clear summary, like a recipe,
for one group of hormones, those made from cholesterol,
the steroid hormones:
|
cholesterol
> >
|
>> |
pregnenolone |
|
|
v
|
|
v
|
|
|
v
|
|
v
|
|
|
v
|
|
progesterone
> > |
corticosterone and
aldosterone |
|
v
|
|
v
|
|
|
v
|
|
v
|
|
|
|
>
|
17 OH progesterone
> >
|
cortisol |
|
v
|
|
v
|
|
|
v
|
|
v
|
|
|
DHEA
|
<>
|
androstenedione> |
estrone
estriol |
|
v
|
|
v
|
|
|
^
|
|
^
|
|
|
androstenedio
|
<> |
testosterone
> >
|
estradiol |
|
|
|
v
|
|
|
|
|
estriol
|
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
Lee, p14
|
|
Don't worry, there's no quiz. Dr. Lee just wanted to show
a little corner of the complex give-and-take between hormones,
how a change in any one hormone in this chart can affect
many others. Lee and Chopra both speak of the dance of
the hormones, the delicately interwoven choreography,
about which we have only the most rudimentary knowledge.
We've begun fooling around with this highly tuned endocrine
system because we've discovered a few coarse, synthetic,
sledgehammer substances that resemble real estrogen, or
real thyroid hormone, or real progesterone. But we really
have only the vaguest notion what we're doing, because
of all the overlapping interrelationships. Our ignorance
has given rise to a brand new disease: endometrial cancer.
Plus other big problems.
Back To Estrogen
Estrogen is really a general term for three separate hormones:
-
estriol
-
estradiol
-
estrone
From here on out in this chapter,
"estrogen" as is produced by the body refers
to all three of the above hormones.
Estrogen is produced in three main places in a woman's
body:
-
the
ovaries
-
the
adrenal glands
-
the
fat cells
The main purpose of estrogen is to
make the uterine lining, the endometrium, ready to implant
a fertilized egg in the event fertilization occurs. To
aid in this function, estrogen will promote
-
water
retention
-
fat
storage
-
maturation
of the female adolescent
All the above is OK if pregnancy is
likely. But excess estrogen throws off the timing. Excess
estrogen causes the body to prepare for embryo implantation
all the time. This state of over-preparation is the cause
of
-
sluggish
blood circulation
-
migraines
-
increased
clotting
-
high
stroke risk
-
disrupted
copper/zinc ratios in brain cells/ mood swings
-
fibroids
-
endometriosis
Every system in the body has a feedback
loop to keep balance. Estrogen has a sister hormone called
progesterone, whose functions are equally important.
Part
2
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