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Can natural progesterone cream help sore breasts or will it make them worse?



A letter from one of our ladies …

Hello Catherine,

I am suffering from breast swelling and tenderness and have heard that natural progesterone cream can help. I was looking into trying it but then I came across a website that claimed natural progesterone contributes to fuller breasts by inducing the release of hormones that prepare a woman to have a child, and breastfeed.

I am a little confused about this conflicting information. Can natural progesterone cream help my breast soreness problems or will it only contribute to making them more swollen and tender?

Thank you,
Nicole

Catherine responds …

Dear Nicole,

Thank you for writing to us. You know, by all accounts, breast pain is universal. In fact, breast pain (or mastalgia) is the most common breast related complaint among women. Nearly 70% of women experience breast pain at some point in their lives.

PMS breast pain is related to how the breast tissue responds to monthly changes in a woman�s estrogen and progesterone hormone levels. If breast pain is accompanied by lumpiness, cysts (accumulated packets of fluid), or areas of thickness, the condition is usually called fibrocystic change. The breasts may feel swollen, painful, tender, or lumpy a few days before menstruation. Breast pain and swelling usually ends when menstruation is over.

According to Jerilynn Prior, M.D., a Canadian clinician, researcher, and professor of endocrinology at the University of British Columbia, PMS breast tenderness that occurs at the sides of the breast under the armpits suggests that ovulation has occurred during that cycle. If the breasts are sore up front and over the nipples, it tends to suggest high estrogen, or estrogen dominance, which can indicate a lack of ovulation. Soreness on the sides and the front may indicate that ovulation occurred but that not much progesterone was produced three or four days after ovulation, and thus estrogen dominance is occurring.

Charting the occurrence of pain (and your stress levels) during your menstrual cycle can help you get a clearer picture of what’s going on.

Which hormone - estrogen or progesterone - is responsible for breast pain just prior to a woman’s menstrual cycle? Often progesterone is cited as the culprit probably because breast tenderness is a symptom of the luteal phase when both hormones are present in higher levels.

Dr John Lee, in his publication What Your Doctor May Not Tell You About Breast Cancer: How Hormone Balance Can Help Save Your Life (by John R. Lee M.D., David Zava, Virginia Hopkins), believed that painful and lumpy breasts of almost every description are caused by estrogen dominance and can be helped with the use of transdermal biodentical progesterone over 2-3 cycles (where synthetic progestins often make them worse).

The Johns Hopkins University conducted a 20 year study, published in 1983 in the American Journal of Epidemiology, showing that women who had good progesterone levels had less than a fifth of the amount of breast cancer, and less than a tenth of all the cancers that occurred in women who were low in progesterone. These outcomes suggest that having a normal level of progesterone protected women from nine-tenths of all cancers that might otherwise have occurred.

Of course, women can experience non-cyclical breast pain, often in one specific area of the breast(s). Non-cyclical pain is most common in women between 40 and 50 years of age. Usually, non-cyclical breast pain does not indicate breast cancer, though women should discuss the condition with their physicians.

Breasts are a fantastic barometer to guide you with your hormonal balancing. In fact, many women use sensations in their breasts to assess their progesterone dosage.

Our breasts tend to feel very ‘full’ or “swollen” when we’re in a state of estrogen dominance. When our progesterone (P) to estradiol (E2) levels are in balance, this swelling and tenderness disappears, and our breasts feel ‘unremarkable’ throughout our menstrual cycle.

Women who are highly stressed, or who have a high intake of caffeine may take longer to respond.

Breast tissue is extremely vascular and, therefore, progesterone absorbs very quickly into the blood stream and surrounding tissue. So try rubbing small amounts of progesterone cream directly onto your breasts several times a day to target breast tissue and oppose estrogen�s action in the body.

We can treat lumpy, painful breasts with 40 mg/day of transdermal bioidentical progesterone for the first 2-3 months then, after the breasts revert to normal, we can maintain optimal health using 20 mg/day. But every woman is different, so we shouldn’t be afraid to use more if we feel we need it.

Side effects of progesterone can include breast tenderness and swelling that, according to antidotal evidence, disappear with the passage of time and dosage adjustment.

Dr Jonathan V. Wright, in his January 2005 edition of Nutrition & Healing, believes we can ease breast pain (and our risk of cancer) with a treatment of Lugol’s iodine (5% “di-atomic” and 10% saturated solution of potassium iodide) which is swabbed on to the vaginal area (to target ovaries). This solution, coupled with caffeine elimination can, according to Dr Wright, completely resolve fibrocystic breast disease in a matter of months while increasing our levels of estriol (estrogen ratio test).

I believe it’s very important we consult our physician about any symptoms we are concerned about. If at all possible, get under the care of a GP skilled in bioidentical hormone replacement therapy (BHRT) so you don’t have to go it alone.

In light, love & laughter,

Catherine P. Rollins
CEO, Making Plans Pty Ltd
Natural-Progesterone-Advisory-Network.com

“Supporting Women in their Choice of Bioidentical Hormone Replacement Therapy (BHRT)”

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“Thank you so much for helping me. I have started to read your self-help ebook and I love what I have read so far. This info is really going to help me on using and understanding NPC. I can't thank you enough for thinking about us women when we need the help at these most crucial times. Thanks you again, and thank you for your time.”
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