I suggest looking into progesterone supplementation if you have menopause symptoms or signs of menopause. There are natural forms of progesterone, which has no known side effects at the usual dose of 20–40 mg daily. Be sure to consult a physician who is knowledgeable about natural progesterone before beginning treatment with it.
Although it's available in pill form, many women prefer natural progesterone in a skin cream base, which you can get without a prescription. Topically applied creams are absorbed into body tissues immediately. Oral progesterone is first metabolized by your liver and converted into three different compounds. You can also use a transdermal spray such as Progest-Ease, that can be applied to the skin and absorbed into the blood stream without going through the liver.
A typical dosage of natural progesterone cream is 20 mg a day or one-quarter to one-half teaspoon amounts applied to any clean area of the skin twice a day. Look for a product that contains 400–600 mg of progesterone per ounce like Pro-Gest or Fem-Gest.
Perimenopausal women can apply the cream from day 12 to day 26 of their menstrual cycle. Menopausal women not taking estrogen may use progesterone for two to three weeks each month. And don't buy products that list wild yam on the label. Unprocessed, wild yam can't be converted to progesterone in your body. This conversion from the plants can only be done in a laboratory. And don't buy progesterone products that are made with mineral oil, which blocks the progesterone from entering your body. You can find a good natural progesterone cream at the Women's International Pharmacy (www.womensinternational.com).
