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Menopause: Herbs that can ease the transition

Herbs for Health Staff

Excerpted from Herbs for Health Magazine

 

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For many women, menopause brings relief from monthly periods, freedom from

worry about unplanned pregnancy, and excitement about entering a new phase

of life. For many others, menopause brings physical and emotional upheaval

linked to changes occurring as the female body makes its transition out of

the child-bearing years.

 

Whether you're among the former or the latter or somewhere in between,

chances are that you will at some point seek relief from the symptoms of

menopause, which include insomnia, depression, stiff joints, bloating,

vaginal dryness, sore breasts, and hot flashes.

 

Hot flashes, which are characterized by a sudden increase in heart rate,

peripheral blood flow, and sweating, are for many women the most

uncomfortable aspect of menopause. Research suggests that about 75 percent

of menopausal women are affected at one time or another by hot flashes, 15

percent of them seriously so. These figures suggest that four to five

million U.S. women currently are severely affected by hot flashes.

 

Modern science has linked hot flashes to a decline in estrogen levels, which

in menopausal women are only about 10 percent of their former levels. For

the past several decades, conventional medicine has treated hot flashes and

other menopausal discomforts with estrogen replacement therapy (ERT).

Because ERT is contraindicated for women with a history of cancer, hormone

replacement therapy (HRT), which combines estrogen with a synthetic

progesterone, is often used instead. But many women don't want to take the

potential increased risk of cancer associated with ERT, or they dislike the

cyclical bleeding often caused by HRT, or they don't want to take pills.

Some women can't tolerate the side effects associated with these treatments.

Despite the high interest of women in alternatives to ERT and HRT, however,

little scientific investigation of alternatives has been done.

 

Traditional herbal medicine has for years offered a variety of treatments to

ease hot flashes. Few of them have been sufficiently researched, but black

cohosh (Cimicifuga racemosa) and vitex (Vitex agnus-castus), or chaste

tree--both of which contain estrogen-like compounds--have shown promise in

relieving menopausal complaints. Further work is needed to determine how

effective these herbal remedies are as actual substitutes for ERT. Dong quai

(Angelica sinensis), an herb commonly used in traditional Chinese medicine,

has been shown to relieve menopause symptoms in many women; how it works is

not clearly understood.

 

Black cohosh

 

North American Indians and eclectic physicians of the nineteenth century

alike used black cohosh in decoctions to treat gynecological problems.

Today's herbalists and homeopaths also value it for this purpose; herbalists

also prescribe it as a hormone regulator and as a diuretic to relieve water

retention.

 

Studies carried out in Europe have verified black cohosh's effectiveness in

reducing the secretion of LH, which has been implicated in causing hot

flashes. Experiments with rats in the 1980s showed that a methanol extract

of black cohosh contains substances that bind to estrogen receptors, causing

a selective reduction in luteinizing hormone (LH), which has been implicated

in causing hot flashes. Experiments with rats in the 1980s showed that a

methoanol extract of black cohosh causing a selective reduction of LH. In

1991, researchers at the University of G " ttingen in Germany performed a

study of a commercial ethanol extract of black cohosh called Remifemin. The

study involved 110 menopausal women between the ages of 50 and 54 who had

received no estrogen replacement therapy for at least six months and

complained of menopausal symptoms.

 

The researchers found that the product reduced LH, and they isolated three

active, as yet unidentified compounds in black cohosh that work together to

suppress the hormone.

 

Today in Germany, black cohosh is a main ingredient of three commercial

drugs used for menopausal discomforts. Germany's Commission E, a

governmental panel that studies and makes recommendations about medicinal

herbs, has found black cohosh to be a safe and reasonably effective

treatment of nervous conditions associated with menopause. However, the U.S.

Food and Drug Administration in 1986 found no pharmacologic evidence of

therapeutic value in black cohosh and cautioned against its overuse.

 

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Black cohosh

 

(also known as black snakeroot, bugbane, rattleroot, rattleweed, bugwort)

Botanical name: Cimicifuga racemosa

Family: Ranunculaceae (buttercup family)

Parts used: Rhizomes and roots

 

Therapy: The German Commission E has found black cohosh to be effective in

the treatment of nervous conditions associated with menopause. In animal and

human studies, it has reduced levels of luteinizing hormone associated with

hot flashes and shown estrogenic activity similar to ERT.

Contraindication: Anyone with heart disease shouldn't use black cohosh.

Possible side effects: Overdose causes dizziness, nausea, diarrhea,

abdominal pain, headache, joint pains, decreased heart rate.

Dosage: Administered as a 40 to 60 percent alcohol extract in a quantity

equivalent to 40 mg daily; also in the form of a decoction prepared from 0.3

to 2 g of the herb.

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Vitex

 

Hippocrates recommended vitex in the fourth century b.c. to treat injuries,

inflammations, and swelling of the spleen. Its common name, chaste tree, is

derived from the belief that it would suppress libido; European Catholics

placed blossoms of the plant at the clothing of novice monks. Like black

cohosh, contemporary herbalists value vitex for its hormone-regulating

action and often prescribe it to treat not only hot flashes, but depression

and vaginal dryness as well.

 

Vitex is believed to act on the hypothalamus and pituitary, regulating

progesterone levels. Most of the clinical studies of vitex have been done in

Europe and were noncontrolled. Two surveys of gynecological practices in

Germany investigated the effect of vitex on 1,542 women aged thirteen to

sixty-two with gynecological complaints. The women took forty drops of a

commercial vitex product for an average length of 166 days. Physicians and

patients agreed that the vitex product relieved fluid retention, bloating,

breast tenderness, headache, and fatigue. Two percent of the patients

reported side effects that included nausea, other gastric complaints, and

diarrhea. Symptoms improved after an average of 25.3 days of taking the

vitex drops. Additional anecdotal clinical reports indicate that vitex may

help manage hot flashes, although further investigation is needed.

 

In Europe, vitex has been used for about forty years in a commercial

alcohol-based tincture of the fruits known as Agnolyt; 100 mg of the

solution is standardized to contain 9 g of the fruit. Recommended dosage is

forty drops with liquid in the morning for several months to offset fluid

retention and other discomforts. A solid extract equivalent of the tincture

has been developed for those who are sensitive to alcohol.

Side effects from using vitex are rare, and there are no known interactions

with other drugs. Commission E has supported the use of chaste-tree berries

to treat menstrual disorders and mastodynia (painful breasts).

 

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Vitex

 

(also known as chaste tree)

Botanical name: Vitex agnus-castus

Family: Verbenaceae (verbena family)

Part used: Fruit

Therapy: Exact effect on menopause unclear

Possible side effect: Produces an itchy rash.

Dosage: 20 mg of concentrated alcohol extract of the fruit.

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Dong quai

 

Known as a blood-purifying tonic in traditional Chinese medicine, dong quai

is one of the best-selling Chinese herbal products in North America. Western

herbalists view dong quai as having tonic and regulatory effects on the

female reproductive system, and it is often used to treat menopausal

symptoms. Scientific investigations have confirmed dong quai's

pain-relieving, antispasmodic, and anti-inflammatory activity. It is

generally believed to lower blood pressure and to soothe discomforts

associated with menopause.

 

Herbalists view dong quai as the ``female ginseng'', referring to its

ability to revitalize and renourish the female body by correcting hormonal

imbalances; they call upon this Chinese relative of the herb angelica to

regulate and normalize hormonal production.

In traditional Chinese medicine, dong quai is often used in conjunction with

other herbs. In a clinical study in China, Si Wu Tang, a well-known formula

that contains dong quai, was used in conjunction with herbs that tonify the

spleen to treat forty-three menopausal women. Seventy percent of the women

reported that the combination relieved hot flashes, dizziness, blurred

vision, stomachaches, and constipation.

 

Dong quai root is small and ivory in color; it can be purchased sliced and

pressed, or in powder, tincture, or extract forms.

 

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Dong quai

 

(also known as dang gui, tang kuei, and Chinese angelica) Botanical name:

Angelica sinensis (formerly A. polymorpha) Family: Umbelliferae (carrot

family) Part used: Root Therapy: Uterine tonic; said to bring relief from

menopausal symptoms; antispasmodic; treatment for hypertension Possible side

effects: Dermatitis, gastric upset Dosage: 4.5 to 12 g in decoction or

tincture. Extracts, capsules, pills, and powders also are available.

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Be informed

 

Women who have uncomfortable menopause symptoms or are preparing for

menopause should become as knowledgeable as possible about the choices that

are open to them. Talk to health-care providers and read more about

menopause, its effects, and treatment options. Learning about various herbs'

physiological actions, including side effects and contraindications, can

help a woman decide whether herbal remedies are right--and safe--for her.

The resources listed below can be a place for you to start; consult the

Additional Reading list to learn more about the research referred to in this

article.

 

Books and other resources

These books will offer you a starting place in your research on menopause

and treatments for its associated discomforts. Many can be found in your

local library or bookstore.

Gladstar, Rosemary. Herbal Healing for Women. New York: Simon and Schuster,

1993.

Griggs, Barbara. The Green Witch: A Modern Woman's Herbal. London:

Vermillion, 1993.

Henkel, Gretchen. Making the Estrogen Decision. Los Angeles: Lowell House,

1992.

Soule, Deb. The Roots of Healing: A Woman's Book of Herbs. New York: Citadel

Press, 1995.

Weed, Susun. Menopausal Years: The Wise Woman Way. Woodstock, New York: Ash

Tree, 1992.

Wolfe, Honora Lee. Menopause, A Second Spring: Making a Smooth Transition

with Traditional . Boulder, Colorado: Blue Poppy Press,

1995.

 

The following publications also may help; you'll need to order them:

A U.S. government publication, Menopause, may be ordered from the U.S.

Government Bookstore, Room 118, Federal Building, 1000 Liberty Avenue,

Pittsburgh, PA, 15222. It costs $3.25.

A pamphlet, Taking Hormones and Women's Health: Choices, Risks, and

Benefits, may be ordered from the National Women's Health Network, 514 Tenth

Street N.W., Ste. 400, Washington, D.C., 20004. It costs $8 for members and

$10 for nonmembers.

 

Additional reading

Belford-Courtney, Kosalba. ``Comparison of Chinese and Western Uses of

Angelica sinensis.'' Australian Journal of Medical Herbalism 1993, 5(4):

87 - 91.

Brown, Donald J. ``Vitex agnus castus''. Clinical Monograph. Quarterly

Review of Natural Medicine Summer 1994: 111 - 120.

Okker, Eva-Maria, et al. ``Effects of Extracts from Cimicifuga racemosa on

Gonadotropin Release in Menopausal Women and Ovariectomized Rats''. Planta

Medica 1991, 57: 420 - 424.

Kaiser, Kyra. ``Cross-cultural Perspectives on Menopause''. Annals of the

New York Academy of Sciences 1990, 592: 430 - 432.

Kronenberg, Fredi. ``Giving hot flashes the cold shoulder--without drugs''.

Menopause Management April 1993: 20 - 27.

- ----. ``Hot flashes: Phenomenology, quality of life, and search for

treatment options''. Experimental Gerontology 1994, 29(3 - 4):319 - 336.

 

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Estrogen's role

 

Menopause, the cessation of menstruation, marks the end of a woman's

childbearing years, but hormonal changes leading up to this milestone have

begun several years earlier. Each month for some thirty-five or forty years,

follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) from the pituitary gland stimulates the

ripening of an egg in the ovary and an increase in the ovarian hormone

estrogen. The increase in estrogen signals the uterine lining (endometrium)

to thicken in preparation for receiving a fertilized egg and also stimulates

the production of luteinizing hormone (LH) in the pituitary. LH triggers

ovulation and production of a second ovarian hormone, progesterone, which

continues preparing the endometrium for implantation of the egg. If the egg

is not fertilized, however, the production of progesterone declines, and the

endometrium is shed as menstrual fluid.

 

During these years, a feedback system involving the hypothalamus and

pituitary (both in the brain) and the ovaries keeps production of the

various hormones in balance. At some point, however, usually in a woman's

midforties, the amount of estrogen and progesterone secreted by the ovaries

declines. Ovulation and menstrual periods become irregular. When ovulation

ceases completely, progesterone no longer is produced, but some estrogen is,

so the endometrium continues to build up as usual. Without progesterone to

regulate the cycle, however, it grows and grows until it breaks down,

causing spotting. Not until estrogen levels become too low to stimulate

endometrial growth does menstruation stop once and for all.

 

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What are hot flashes?

 

Hot flashes usually affect women who are in the transition to menopause or

in menopause, either naturally or because of medical intervention. They

often occur during the first two years of menopause and decrease over time;

for some women, hot flashes begin during menstruation.

 

The frequency and intensity of hot flashes vary from woman to woman. A

" typical " hot flash lasts three to six minutes; it can last thirty. Hot

flashes can occur over six months to two years--or up to forty years. They

occur spontaneously and without warning signs, although some women link them

to psychological stress, a hot environment, and caffeine or alcohol

consumption.

 

The mechanism that causes hot flashes is unclear, although they have been

linked to declining estrogen levels. Many women have found that they can

deal with them nonmedically. By observing the conditions surrounding you at

the time of a hot flash, you may be able to exert some control. You may wish

to keep a record of the time and severity of a hot flash to see whether

there is a pattern. Dressing (and undressing) in layers can help you

tolerate overheated offices and meeting rooms: at least one study has

confirmed that the frequency and intensity of hot flashes decline

dramatically when women are in a cool environment. Recent research suggests

that exercise and healthy eating habits may be just as effective in reducing

hot flashes as estrogen and hormone replacement therapy. Smoking also plays

a role; it has been shown to reduce estrogen levels, so quitting may help

decrease the incidence of hot flashes along with decreasing the incidence of

cancer, heart disease, and stroke.

 

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Self-esteem and depression

 

A recent study performed at the University of Pennsylvania's Department of

Anthropology found that menopausal depression may be linked to cultural

attitudes. The study included fifteen sociocultural groups in different

parts of the world. It found that in non-Western cultures where older women

gain enhanced status, political power, and decision-making authority, the

depression associated with menopause in Western societies is often

nonexistent. The study concluded that Western ``negative stressors'', such

as the views that menopause is a time of loss and that aging women have lost

their societal value, may work in conjunction with fluctuating hormone

levels to exacerbate feelings of low self-esteem.

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An Herbal Approach

 

Here's a formula developed by herbalist and author Kathi Keville that

contains tinctures of black cohosh, vitex, and dong quai, as well as

tinctures of other herbs traditionally used to relieve menopausal symptoms:

 

Asian ginseng (Panax ginseng) is among the most important herbs in

traditional Chinese medicine. It is the exception to many herbs in that

nearly 3,000 studies have explored a wide range of its medicinal benefits.

Herbalists prescribe it as a tonic used to treat the nervous and hormonal

systems and fatigue. It is not known to cause adverse reactions.

 

Chinese medicine values licorice (Glycyrrhiza glabra) for its ability to

replenish vital energy; people with high blood pressure or edema should use

it sparingly.

Herbalists often prescribe motherwort (Leonurus cardiaca) to treat anxiety

and vaginal dryness, among other conditions. It is considered a gentle

sedative that corrects over-rapid heart beats. Pregnant women shouldn't use

it.

 

Herbalists use the roots and leaves of dandelion (Taraxacum officinale) to

treat a variety of ailments, including mood swings. Insufficient research

has been done to support either side of this argument. In rare cases, the

therapeutic use of dandelion has produced a skin rash.

 

St.-John's-wort (Hypericum perforatum) has traditionally been used to treat

mild depression and anxiety. When taking therapeutic doses of its extract,

it's best to avoid sunlight as the herb has caused photodermatitis in

animals.

 

Menopause Tincture

 

1 teaspoon black cohosh root tincture 1 teaspoon vitex berry tincture 1/2

teaspoon ginseng root tincture

1/2 teaspoon licorice root tincture

1/2 teaspoon dong quai root tincture

1/2 teaspoon motherwort tincture

 

You may prepare the tinctures of the individual herbs yourself

or purchase them. Take 1 teaspoon of the Menopause Tincture three times a

day, mixed in a small amount of warm water.

 

Alternatively, dried herbs can be combined in the same proportions. To use,

pour a cup of boiling water over 1 to 2 teaspoons of the mixture and let it

steep; strain. Drink a cup of this tea three times a day.

 

To relieve water retention, add 1 teaspoon dandelion root tincture. For

depression or nervousness, add 1 teaspoon tincture of St.-John's-wort

flowering tops. If making an infusion, use fresh St.-John's-wort, not dried.

 

 

 

 

http://www.scentsappeal.net

 

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