Podcasts

Questions to Ask Your Doctor About PCOS | PYHP 060

In this episode of the Progress Your Health Podcast, we want to discuss questions you might want to ask your doctor when it comes to PCOS.
PCOS stands for Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome. The name can be misleading. Polycystic means, having multiple cysts on or in your ovaries. While this can be true, many women with PCOS do not have any ovarian cysts. PCOS is a collection of hormonal imbalances that may result in cysts and other unwanted symptoms. 
During this episode, we talk about the diagnosis, symptoms, and questions to ask your doctor regarding PCOS. We explain that PCOS is more of a spectrum of symptoms as some women can have all the symptoms and others a few.  
This is why it is important to have clear communication with your doctor on how:

PCOS is affecting your life.  
What your health goals are with PCOS.  
The proper treatment to help with PCOS. 

Before we move on, let’s understand the basics with PCOS. The common symptoms that are associated with PCOS:
Common PCOS Symptoms: 
Cysts: if you have not had an ultrasound, request that your doctor order you transvaginal ultrasound. As mentioned earlier, many women with PCOS do not have cysts on the ovaries. But if there is any thought that you might have PCOS, then you do want to have a transvaginal ultrasound. This will give us information on the size of the uterus and ovaries. If you have any growths or cysts. It will even check the thickness of the lining of your uterus. 
Missing, Irregular Periods: It is very common in PCOS to miss periods for multiple months. Some women miss one month a year, and others can miss up to six months at a time. It is also common to have cycles that range from 25 days to 45 days.  
Weight gain: Weight gain is one of the most common frustrations with PCOS. It is very easy to gain and hard to lose. Even with strict caloric restriction and a lot of exercise, women with PCOS will be frustrated because they cannot lose weight.
Hair loss: It is common in PCOS to have hair loss. Particularly on the top of the head and temples can appear to be especially thin.  
Hair growth on the face and other areas of the body (except for the head): While it might be easy to lose hair on the head. In PCOS there can be hair growth on other areas of the body. Most commonly, the upper lip, chin and jaw, chest and pubic area before the belly button. We are human, and humans grow hair on our bodies. But in PCOS it might seem a bit more extreme.  
Irritable: It is common to feel irritable not warranted for the situation in PCOS. 
Lack of Conceiving, Fertility issues: PCOS is one of the top causes of infertility. There tends to be a lack of ovulation in PCOS. But there are many women with PCOS that have children. But there is a link between fertility and PCOS.   
Elevated Blood Pressure: Some women with PCOS will have essential hypertension. Or eleva

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Perimenopause, Why Am I Gaining Weight? | PYHP 059

This is one of the top concerns of women in Perimenopause. Perimenopause usually occurs in women between the ages of the late '30s to late '40s. An important note here is, Perimenopause is not Menopause. And while both Perimenopause and Menopause may have some of the same symptoms. There are also many differences between the two. It is of value to know this because treating and working with Perimenopause can be quite different from Menopause. The hormone changes in Perimenopause can cause a lot of unwanted symptoms. If you are interested in more in-depth information, and healthy options to deal with Perimenopause, check out our course, The Perimenopause Masterclass. 
But for this podcast, we focused on the unexpected, unearned weight gain that can happen in Perimenopause. In Perimenopause, it is common to hear women complain of feeling like they have gained 10-20 pounds almost overnight. They are stumped because they are unsure of where his added weight came from. We have many patients exclaim that they have not changed their diet or exercise routine, yet keep putting on weight. And this weight gain is almost always focused in the stomach and waistline. I cannot tell you how many patients I have had that say, they have never had a belly before. And now they have grown a gut for no reason. Well, there is a reason, it's your hormones. 
What do women do when they start gaining weight?  
Common response to weight gain is to eat less and exercise more. Bluntly put, this is the wrong response. There might be an initial drop in weight when you restrict your food and jump on the treadmill. But more often than not, in Perimenopause, restricting your calories and increasing your exercise will either result in no weight loss or even more weight gain.
But this is what we have always been taught. 
Less calories in + exercise(calories out) = weight loss.  
Well, maybe in your 20's this might work. This will not work in your 40's. There is nothing more frustrating than to workout like crazy, eat like a rabbit, and not lose weight. Not to mention this not a realistic way of living. When you start to eat like a normal human, you will gain the weight back plus more at a rapid pace.  
Why doesn't eating less and exercising more in Perimenopause not work?  
It is about the cortisol-glucose-insulin love triangle. Yes, it is like an awful drama that results in the fatty belly that you never had.    
When you do intense cardiovascular exercise, it will raise your cortisol. When cortisol rises, it will mobilize glucose. When glucose rises, then your pancreas will release insulin. Insulin is a fat-storing-hormone in the body.  
This is really the real deal. You are doing some crazy intense, cardio exercise. This will cause your adrenals to increase cortisol. The cortisol will then mobilize glucose from your large muscles, such as your gluteus (bum) and quadriceps (thighs). The increase in glucose will cause your pancreas to pump out insulin. The insulin opens the door cell and allows glucose to enter. Now the glucose that is mobilized from your muscles gets turned into fat. That is why in Perimen

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What Happened to Kavinace? | PYHP 058

Kavinace by Neuroscience is no longer available as a supplement.  April 10th, 2019, the FDA issued a letter to several nutraceutical companies to discontinue supplements containing 4-amino-3phenylbutyric acid.  The FDA has determined that 4-amino-3phenylbutyric acid, also commonly referred to as Phenibut is not a dietary supplement. We published a previous Kavinace article shortly after the FDA letters were sent out. 
As of the letter dated April 10th, the companies had 15 days to comply.  This left people that had taken Kavinace safely for years in a bit of a quandary.  Kavinace is, I mean, was a dietary supplement that many people took to help with staying asleep.  It contained 950mg of a combination of taurine and 4-amino-3-phenyl butyric acid HCL per capsule.  
Most people did well on one to two capsules taken at night before bed.  It wasn't a sleep medication, like Ambien or Unisom but did help to raise GABA to help with staying asleep at night.  I used this myself and with patients to stay asleep at night.  
Commonly in perimenopause and menopause, women have trouble staying asleep.  Often they fall asleep easily but will wake up in the middle of the night for hours.  And by the time they are able to fall back to sleep, it is time to wake up for the day.  Kavinace was very helpful because it contained 4-amino-3-phenyl butyric acid, which is a precursor to GABA.  Meaning it is easily digested and can cross the blood-brain barrier to help convert to GABA and stimulate GABA receptors to stay asleep. 
One of the reasons that sleep is so important is terrible sleep can make you gain weight.  People, especially women, will gain weight easily if they do not sleep well at night. Sleep is necessary for so many health reasons, it is also responsible in part for your metabolism.  It really goes back to our adrenal glands.  
The adrenals secrete cortisol in a diurnal fashion.  Meaning that cortisol is released highest in the morning and stays up through the day and drops at night so that you can sleep well.  Commonly, (especially in hormone imbalance, perimenopause, and menopause) you will see cortisol rise in the middle of the night. That causes us to wake up in the middle of the night for no reason. 
Other than it is aggravating to be awake for hours in the middle of the night and tired during the day, the elevation of cortisol at night can negatively affect metabolism. Often we tell patients, forget waking up early to go to the gym.  Just get that extra hour of sleep. One of the first things that we work on with patients is sleep. Sleeping properly is great for the waistline. 
Well you might be asking, Kavinace is no longer available, what do I do now?  There are many options available to replace Kavinace and sleep well. Back when I first found Kavinace years ago, all we had available to us was GABA.  GABA is a huge molecule that is not easily absorbed through digestion, so it was a waste to take. Now we have available, PharmaGABA, which can be absorbed through the digestive tract.  
PharmaGABA is a great alternative to Kavinace.  You can take it as capsules at night or chewable tablets.  If you are a tough sleeper, and still wake in the middle of the night, you can chew up 1-2 more t

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Perimenopause vs Menopause | PYHP 057

 
It is common to mistake perimenopause for menopause and vice versa.  Labs can be misleading. Doctors can be misleading in your concerns about whether you are in perimenopause vs. menopause.  Even symptoms can be misleading. In this article, I am going to explain the differences between perimenopause and menopause.  As well as information to help you determine which hormone phase you are in at the moment.
Both perimenopause and menopause can start between 35 to 50years old.  As the word states, perimenopause starts before menopause. While that might seem obvious, sometimes it is hard to differentiate between them.  I have had many patients tell me they are in menopause but are really in perimenopause. You might be asking, ‘why is it a big deal to know the difference?’.  That can come down to the treatment. Treating a woman for menopausal symptoms when she is in perimenopause can not only be ineffective. But can make the symptoms worse as well as new symptoms.
Perimenopause usually starts in the mid-’40s, but I have seen it as early as the early ’30s.  The average age of menopause is 51 years old, but I have often seen it occur in the mid-’40s. So while it seems that perimenopause and menopause can overlap, there are distinctions in the symptoms.
Some distinctions between perimenopause and menopause: I will try to be as comprehensive as possible. Here are the most common differences in symptomatology between perimenopause and menopause.
Periods:
In perimenopause, if you still have your uterus, then you will be having a period.  The periods can change from your “normal.” But you will still be having a regular period.  What you might notice are periods might be heavier, longer, more spotting, more cramping. Often this can lead to low-iron/anemia.  
This is the time that women find out that they have fibroid(s).  Fibroids are benign growths in the uterus and during perimenopause can become “active,” causing cramping, heavier periods and more spotting.  This is usually the time women will get a hysterectomy. The periods are so “off” that most doctors only recommend a hysterectomy. Now that might correct the period “issues.”  But it does nothing for the other symptoms.    
In menopause, the periods become less frequent.  Might miss one or many months at a time. The period that you do have can come at any time. They might be light one month and then four months later a heavy, painful period.  
Hot Flashes and Night Sweats:
In menopause, you will have lots of hot flashes and night sweats.  But the distinction here is, in perimenopause you don’t have daytime hot flashes. But you will have night sweats, really bad night sweats.  The night sweats in perimenopause usually happen anywhere from 7 to 10 days before your period. But once you get your period, the night sweats go away.  
Mood: 
In perimenopause, you are much more irritable than in menopause.  That is one of the most common complaints in perimenopause. Short-fuse, low tolerance, very little patience for even minor offenses.  The impatience and overwhelmed wound up feeling is not seen as much in menopause as it is in perimenopause.  

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Perimenopause or PMS? | PYHP 056

In this podcast, we talk about the difference between PMS (premenstrual syndrome) and perimenopause.  We get this question all the time, Doc, I think I am going into menopause.' When really, they are nowhere near menopause, let alone perimenopause. What makes it so confusing is that there are so many similarities between PMS and perimenopause.
But some distinctions are important to point out, especially when it comes to testing and treatment. PMS (premenstrual syndrome) is pretty much as it sounds.  Symptoms appear prior (pre) to the period (menses). But usually, the symptoms appear in a cyclical pattern.
The symptoms will appear anywhere from 14 days to just a couple of days before the period. The distinction between PMS and perimenopause, is the symptoms are present all month in perimenopause.
Perimenopause is NOT menopause.  It is the time before a woman enters menopause.  It can be anywhere from age late 30's to late 40s.  In perimenopause, you are still getting your period (it might be irregular, but you are STILL getting your period).        
But the symptoms between PMS and perimenopause are similar.
So just to reiterate:

Symptoms in PMS occur between 14 days to 2 days before your period.
Symptoms in perimenopause occur all month long.

Symptoms that are similar in PMS and perimenopause:

Irritability: patience is short.  Becomes easily irritated, even at situations that it is not warranted.  Of course, you feel guilty after having a hormonal tantrum and cry and feel badly about the encounter.  You are not crazy, it is your hormones.
Acne
Carb cravings
Sleep issues –waking in the middle of the night and cannot go back to sleep
Fatigue: low energy–both physically and mentally tired
Anxiousness not always warranted for the situation
Bloated: even though your bowels are moving fine
Cramping before period even starts

Symptoms that are different between PMS and Perimenopause

All of a sudden your periods get weird.  Periods come early or late. Your spot for days.  One month your period is super heavy, and the next kinda light.  Every month can be different in perimenopause.
Crampy painful periods
Symptoms all month long in perimenopause–it is like #pmsallmonthlong
Symptoms 14 days to 2 days before your period
Hair loss

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How to Increase T3 Conversion? | PYHP 055

In this episode, we answer a reader question about her low T3. Kelli’s case is a bit complicated, but it sheds light on how important it is to address low T3 levels.  We get this question all the time about the thyroid hormone, T3. Many will say, ‘my free T3 levels are low, but my doctor will not do anything about it’. We wanted to talk about low T3 and how there are many factors that can cause a low T3.  Also on ways to increase your T3 conversion as well as some medications for low T3. We are also going to touch on autoimmune diseases such as Hashimoto’s, Type I diabetes and Celiac disease.
Question from Kelli:
My thyroid labs are all within the normal range, but I FEEL so depleted. My free t3 has never tested above 2.3. I have T1D and Celiac disease already. I know my body is prone to be difficult and function lower on some levels than most. How can I fix my free t3 if it is low and if the doctor says it’s not “treatable low.”
One of our most popular blog posts is, ‘Low T3 levels”.  This partly why we wanted to talk about Kelli’s concerns about her autoimmune diseases and her low T3.  Kelli is one of a common predicament that we see all the time. Having low levels of FreeT3 but her doctor says it’s not treatable or just ignores it.  Low T3 levels are very much treatable and should not be blown off. We really like Kelli’s questions because she also has Type One Diabetes (T1D) and Celiac disease.  
T1D is considered an autoimmune disease and shouldn’t be confused with Type Two Diabetes.  T1D is where the immune system will attack the insulin-producing cells in the pancreas. So the pancreas cannot release insulin in response to elevated levels of blood sugar.  Type One Diabetes is considered, insulin-dependent and most likely diagnosed before the age of 20.
Kelli also has Celiac disease which is an intolerance to gluten.  In the small intestines, there are little finger-like projections called microvilli which is what absorbs what we have eaten.  Think of it as a long carpet/rug. You then squish up the rug together, so there are many undulations. This increases the surface area tremendously, and then there is more area to absorb nutrients.  In celiac, because of the immune reaction to gluten will cause terrible damage to the microvilli. Causing the villi to erode consequently causing many symptoms including malabsorption and malnutrition.
If Kelli has T1D and Celiac and Low T3 levels she very well may have Hashimoto’s. Hashimoto’s is a condition where the immune system creates antibodies attacking the thyroid and eventually causing lowered thyroid function. Hashimoto’s can be similar to celiac.  There is a sensitivity to gluten in Hashimotos that patients do much better on a gluten-free diet.
Hashimoto’s is similar to celiac bc gluten needs to be eliminated to reduce the Hashimoto immune response.  
Let’s back up a bit and explain about thyroid.  The thyroid gland secretes mainly T4. T4 will travel in the bloodstream and convert to T3.  Free T3 is the active form of thyroid. Even if you have perfect levels of T4 but low T3, then you could have symptoms of low T3.  
Doctors really don’t know what to do if the T3 levels are low.  A lot

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