
Uterine Fibroids are benign growths inside the uterus. Some people do not know they even have fibroids and others have significant symptoms that can impact their quality of life. For more information, you can read our blog post about Uterine Fibroids. This podcast discusses:
Uterine fibroids can be genetic, and you seem them run in families. Or it can seem out of the blue, and no one in the family has them except you. Either way, remember that uterine fibroids are not cancer. Uterine fibroids are benign growths.
While fibroids are not cancer-causing, they can still affect a woman’s quality of life. Fibroids can have many symptoms from minor to excruciating.
Symptoms of Uterine Fibroids:
Some women can have one fibroid or many fibroids. Fibroids can be located all over the uterus. They are commonly found inside the uterus. But fibroids can also be inside the uterine muscle wall. Fibroids are inside the uterine wall can cause a tremendous amount of pain. I have had patients that have had hysterectomies because the pain is unbearable.
There is so much more you can do for fibroids that removing the uterus. I understand, when there is that much pain and so much bleeding, a hysterectomy might be the best option. But there are other alternatives to help keep the symptoms low. And there are reasons for why the uterine fibroids actually grow in the first place.
Lifestyle and food can cause existing fibroids to grow, creating more symptoms. And your own hormones can cause fibroids to grow, exacerbating symptoms. This podcast will explain in depth what lifestyle and dietary choices can increase the risk of fibroids. And what you can do to reduce the symptoms of fibroids.
We will also tell you about conventional treatments for fibroids, from surgery to hormone treatments. But before you go under the knife or take unsafe synthetic hormones, listen to this podcast. We will talk about our natural hormone balancing and lifestyle treatments to help shrink or alleviate the symptoms of uterine fibroids. And as a gift to you, download our program to help you with weight loss and balancing hormones. The KCCP (Keto-Carb-Cycling-Program) will reduce the inflammatory processes that exacerbate uterine fibroids. At the same time, will help you lose weight, particularly belly fat.
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Discover the common and unfamiliar symptoms that you might be experiencing. Get access to cases of real women with hormonal conditions.
Exciting Announcement! We’re launching the Progress Your Hormones Community today—a space designed to empower women with expert guidance and support for navigating perimenopause and menopause. Get access to live office hours, hormone hot seats, lab interpretation, and more! If you have a question, please visit our website and click Ask the Doctor a question. Join the Progress Your Hormones Community Stay Connected Instagram: @drvalorie TikTok: @drvaloried Disclaimer: All content in this blog, including text, images, audio, video, or other formats, was created for informational purposes only. This video, website, and blog aim to promote consumer/public understanding and general knowledge of various health topics. This content is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Please consult your healthcare provider with any questions or concerns you may have regarding your condition before undertaking a new healthcare regimen. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you have read on this website. If your healthcare provider is not interested in discussing your health concerns regarding this topic, then it is time to find a new doctor.
Launching August 11: Join our new Progress Your Hormones Community! Get expert guidance, real support, and answers to your HRT questions—together, not alone. Get expert guidance, real support, and answers to your HRT questions—together, not alone. If you have a question, please visit our website and click Ask the Doctor a question. Join the Progress Your Hormones Community Stay Connected Instagram: @drvalorie TikTok: @drvaloried Disclaimer: All content in this blog, including text, images, audio, video, or other formats, was created for informational purposes only. This video, website, and blog aim to promote consumer/public understanding and general knowledge of various health topics. This content is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Please consult your healthcare provider with any questions or concerns you may have regarding your condition before undertaking a new healthcare regimen. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you have read on this website. If your healthcare provider is not interested in discussing your health concerns regarding this topic, then it is time to find a new doctor.
Welcome to Episode 2 with our upgraded video setup! Dr. Valorie Davidson and Dr. Robert Maki from Progress Your Health answer a thoughtful listener’s question: Why are my progesterone labs always low even on 200mg oral HRT? If you’re taking progesterone and worried about low numbers or uterine protection, this episode is for you. 💡 We cover: ‘ ● ⏱️ Why timing your blood draw makes or breaks your lab results ● 💊 The difference between sustained-release vs. instant-release progesterone ● 🧬 How genetic variants (like CYP enzymes) impact progesterone metabolism ● 🩺 When to get a transvaginal ultrasound to assess uterine lining health ● ✅ What blood level to aim for—and when to test it ● 💡 Bonus: How your detox pathways (and even caffeine tolerance!) can affect hormones If you have a question, please visit our website and click Ask the Doctor a question. Join the Progress Your Hormones Community Stay Connected Instagram: @drvalorie TikTok: @drvaloried Disclaimer: All content in this blog, including text, images, audio, video, or other formats, was created for informational purposes only. This video, website, and blog aim to promote consumer/public understanding and general knowledge of various health topics. This content is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Please consult your healthcare provider with any questions or concerns you may have regarding your condition before undertaking a new healthcare regimen. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you have read on this website. If your healthcare provider is not interested in discussing your health concerns regarding this topic, then it is time to find a new doctor.
In this episode of the Progress Your Health Podcast, Dr. Valorie Davidson and Dr. Robert Maki answer a listener’s question about spotting and night sweats after starting hormone replacement therapy (HRT). Lisa, age 55, shares her experience using Bi-Est cream, oral progesterone, and testosterone—and why she’s now experiencing unexpected bleeding and sleep disruption. We break down: ● Why spotting can happen after starting HRT—even with low estradiol levels ● The difference between estradiol and estriol in Bi-Est cream ● How progesterone protects the uterine lining ● When to increase vs. decrease HRT doses ● The role of cortisol and adrenal health in night sweats ● When to order a transvaginal ultrasound ● How body type, menstrual history, and hormone sensitivity influence dosing ● Why cookie-cutter HRT doesn’t work for most women 💡 Plus, we share details about our upcoming Progress Your Hormones Community, launching in August 2025—a safe space for women navigating perimenopause, menopause, longevity, and personalized hormone education. If you have a question, please visit our website and click Ask the Doctor a question. Join the Progress Your Hormones Community Stay Connected Instagram: @drvalorie TikTok: @drvaloried Disclaimer: All content in this blog, including text, images, audio, video, or other formats, was created for informational purposes only. This video, website, and blog aim to promote consumer/public understanding and general knowledge of various health topics. This content is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Please consult your healthcare provider with any questions or concerns you may have regarding your condition before undertaking a new healthcare regimen. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you have read on this website. If your healthcare provider is not interested in discussing your health concerns regarding this topic, then it is time to find a new doctor.
In this episode of the Progress Your Health Podcast, Dr. Valorie Davidson and Dr. Robert Maki dive into a question from Sabrina about the accuracy and usefulness of saliva versus blood testing for hormone replacement therapy (HRT). 👉 Is saliva testing more accurate for transdermal Bi-Est creams? 👉 Why does your estradiol look low in bloodwork but high in saliva? 👉 Does skipping your hormones before testing give a better result—or just confuse the picture? 👉 What’s a true 80/20 Bi-Est ratio, and how can you read your prescription dose properly? 👉 Why might oral progesterone make you anxious instead of sleepy? You’ll learn: ● How to interpret blood and saliva test results when you’re on HRT ● The pros and cons of different testing methods (serum vs. saliva vs. urine) ● The real reason your progesterone might backfire and worsen sleep ● Why your estrogen dose may be too low—even if your labs say you’re “in range” ● How to work with your practitioner to adjust your HRT plan safely This episode is perfect for anyone on HRT who’s feeling confused about their labs, frustrated by persistent symptoms, or stuck between conflicting advice. 🧠 Bonus: Dr. Davidson breaks down estrogen ratios and cream dosing using real-world examples. If you have a question, please visit our website and click Ask the Doctor a question. Join the Progress Your Hormones Community Stay Connected Instagram: @drvalorie TikTok: @drvaloried Disclaimer: All content in this blog, including text, images, audio, video, or other formats, was created for informational purposes only. This video, website, and blog aim to promote consumer/public understanding and general knowledge of various health topics. This content is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Please consult your healthcare provider with any questions or concerns you may have regarding your condition before undertaking a new healthcare regimen. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you have read on this website. If your healthcare provider is not interested in discussing your health concerns regarding this topic, then it is time to find a new doctor.
In this episode of the Progress Your Health Podcast, Dr. Valorie Davidson and Dr. Robert Maki dive deep into a question from “Amber,” a 49-year-old woman struggling with extreme perimenopausal symptoms — despite being on progesterone, an estradiol patch, and thyroid medication. 🔍 Topics Covered: ● Why HRT (Hormone Replacement Therapy) might not be working ● Common perimenopause symptoms: sleep issues, fatigue, brain fog, weight gain ● The pitfalls of cookie-cutter hormone prescriptions ● How cortisol, stress, and over-exercising sabotage your hormones ● When estrogen dominance, low progesterone, and thyroid dysfunction overlap ● Could progesterone be making things worse? ● Why rhythmic hormone dosing may offer a better solution 💡 Learn why so many women feel dismissed or misdiagnosed during this transition—and how to find a treatment that actually works for your body. If you have a question, please visit our website and click Ask the Doctor a question. Join the Progress Your Hormones Community Stay Connected Instagram: @drvalorie TikTok: @drvaloried Disclaimer: All content in this blog, including text, images, audio, video, or other formats, was created for informational purposes only. This video, website, and blog aim to promote consumer/public understanding and general knowledge of various health topics. This content is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Please consult your healthcare provider with any questions or concerns you may have regarding your condition before undertaking a new healthcare regimen. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you have read on this website. If your healthcare provider is not interested in discussing your health concerns regarding this topic, then it is time to find a new doctor.