It’s time to reconsider hormone therapy as a treatment for menopause, according to a new study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association. This new review suggests that for ...
Last week, a new follow-up to the WHI study by the original authors was published in JAMA — and it concluded that it's safe to take hormone therapy for menopause. Here's the thing: While the ...
More than two decades ago, the shocking results of a major women’s health study challenged the safety of menopause hormones, and overnight, millions of women and their doctors abandoned the ...
The use of hormone therapy to relieve menopause symptoms like hot flashes and night sweats is not correlated to a greater risk of death, researchers say. Hormone therapy can reduce bone loss and ...
Researchers examined 453 menopausal women aged 40–65 with moderate or severe hot flushes who were unsuitable for hormone replacement therapy, after giving them 45mg of fezolinetant or placebo ...
The findings, from two trials involving tens of thousands of women, could influence guidelines around the use of hormonal treatment for menopausal symptoms.
If exercise seems to trigger hot flashes, switching to lower-intensity activities could help reduce hot flash frequency.
Research, by her menopause clinic Newson Health, found almost a third of women had between two and five medical appointments before their symptoms were diagnosed as linked to the perimenopause and ...
When preliminary results of the Women's Health Initiative clinical trial were published in 2003, they upended menopause care in the U.S. The study linked hormone therapy — a form of treatment for ...
An older form of hormone therapy taken to ease the symptoms of menopause could increase the risk of ovarian cancer, according to results released Thursday from two studies involving tens of ...
Fezolinetant reduces the frequency and severity of hot flushes during menopause for 24 weeks, without serious side effects, according to research presented at the 26th European Congress of ...