Hot flashes may increase risk of heart disease

Hot flashes may increase risk of heart disease

Hot flashes may be more than just a woman feeling the heat – they may also be increasing a woman’s risk of heart disease.  Hot flashes, typically associated with menopause is when a woman may have a quick feeling of intense heat along with sometimes a red, flushed face and sweating.  Up to 70% of women experience hot flashes with a third describing them as frequent or severe.  Now a new study has discovered a link between women who get frequent hot flashes during menopause who may be susceptible to vascular dysfunction which can lead to heart disease.

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Frequent Urination in Women – What Can You Do?

Frequent Urination in Women – What Can You Do?

Frequent urination is a problem most often associated with older men, but it can also affect women, of any age. Frequent urination can have a genuinely harsh effect on your quality of life, whether it causes you to lose sleep at night or prevent you from going out and about for fear of being too far from a bathroom for too long.

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What every woman must share with her gynecologist

What every woman must share with her gynecologist

A trip to the gynecologist is usually not at the top of most women’s list of things to do.  You’re flat on your back, feet in stirrups with your private parts being inspected by someone you mainly see once a year.  But that yearly visit to the gynecologist is a very important part of a woman’s health making it imperative to not hold back on certain health issues. 

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Vaginal Bacteria and UTI

Vaginal Bacteria and UTI

Urinary tract infections are a major nuisance for women. Nearly half of all women will suffer from one at least once in their lifetime, and for half of those women, UTIs will be a recurring nightmare. The infections are usually treated with antibiotics, but each time a UTI returns it is even more likely the infection will recur yet again.

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The Fibrocystic Breast

The Fibrocystic Breast

Fibrocystic breasts – those containing lumpy nodular tissue – used to be regarded as a “disease.” But somewhere along the way, “fibrocystic breast disease” got downgraded to merely “fibrocystic breast changes,” probably because more than half of all women experience these changes at one point in their lives.

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Handling Low Progesterone

Handling Low Progesterone

Progesterone is a key hormone in the female body. It regulates your menstrual cycle, and prepares your womb each month for pregnancy by thickening the lining of your uterus to accommodate a fertilized egg.  If no fertilized egg shows up, your progesterone levels drop, menstruation returns, and it's business as usual.

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Predicting How Long a Woman Will Live

Predicting How Long a Woman Will Live

Ladies, if we could tell you how long you will live, would you want to know? It may no longer be just an academic question or “what if” scenario. A study done by the North American Menopause Society (NAMS) has identified a possible “life line” predictor for women that promises to be more than just a little bit more accurate than a Gypsy's palm reading.

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Older Women on Statins at Risk of Diabetes

Older Women on Statins at Risk of Diabetes

Statins are cholesterol-lowering medications that are widely prescribed by doctors, particularly to older people whose cholesterol levels have placed them at increased risk of cardiovascular disease.  But a new study out of the University of Queensland in Australia will likely have many doctors thinking twice before prescribing statins to women.

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Predicting Postpartum Depression

Predicting Postpartum Depression

Depression following pregnancy, commonly known as postpartum depression (PPD), is a mood disorder, a type of clinical depression, causing crying episodes, anxiety, sadness, low energy, changes in sleeping/eating patterns, reduced desire for sex, and irritability.

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9 ways women can lower risk of breast cancer

9 ways women can lower risk of breast cancer

The one cancer for woman that makes them take notice the most is breast cancer.  This is understandable since other than lung cancer, breast cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer in women.  It is estimated that in 2017, there will be 252,710 new cases of the disease with one in eight women who will develop invasive breast cancer in their lifetime. 

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