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Click here and find the best alternative herbal medicine designed specifically for women in menopause. We have selected the best herbs to make menopause much more bearable and easier to live with.

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The rest degenerate over the years. During the reproductive years, a gland in the brain generates hormones that cause a new egg to be released from its follicle each month. As the follicle develops, it produces the sex hormones estrogen and progesterone, which thicken the lining of the uterus. This enriched lining is prepared to receive and nourish herbalmedicine a fertilized egg, which could develop herbalmedicine into a baby. If fertilization does not occur, estrogen and progesterone levels drop, the lining of the uterus herbalmedicine breaks down, and menstruation occurs. For reasons unknown, your ovaries gradually begin to decline in hormone production during your mid-30s. In your late 40s, the process accelerates and hormones fluctuate more, causing irregular menstrual cycles and unpredictable episodes of bleeding. By herbalmedicine your early to mid-50s, periods finally end altogether. However, estrogen production does not completely stop. The ovaries decrease their output significantly, but still may produce a small amount. Progesterone, the other female hormone, works during the second half of the menstrual cycle to create a lining in the uterus as a viable home for an egg, and to shed the lining if the egg is not fertilized.

This constant dance of hormones herbalmedicine orchestrates our fertility, a dance that changes throughout the month and throughout our lives. Of the millions of follicles (eggs) in the ovaries, eight to ten mature each month. But, in most cases, only one reaches the point that it ruptures and releases an egg (ovulation). The unused follicles die. After ovulation, the ruptured follicle reconnects and continues to grow, becoming the corpus luteum. In preparation for fertilization, it produces estrogen and progesterone to create an herbalmedicine extra lining in the uterus. But after about 12 days, if no fertilization occurs, the corpus luteum dies, and estrogen and progesterone levels plunge. This causes the lining to be expelled. Menstruation begins. Hormonally, a woman''s period marks the end of the menstrual cycle. A new cycle begins when the hypothalamus, in response to the dramatic drop in estrogen and progesterone levels at the end of the last cycle, sends GnRh (another hormone) to the pituitary, which then releases a new batch of follicle stimulating hormones (FSH) to the ovaries. This stimulates the maturation of a small group of follicles.

At mid-cycle, a critical peak of estrogen production alerts the hypothalamus to herbalmedicine create more GnRh. This time it tells the pituitary to release its lutenizing hormone (LH) to the ovaries, a trigger that will spur the small explosion that releases the egg from the dominant follicle. Ovulation occurs and the corpus luteum forms to continue estrogen and progesterone production until it dies in the absence of pregnancy. Hormone levels plunge. In perimenopause, the ovaries'' estrogen and progesterone production shifts from one that''s follicle rich (with an emphasis on creating eggs) to one that''s stromal rich (less herbalmedicine emphasis on eggs, more on the stroma that holds the eggs together). As a result, the hormonal dance changes. A follicle releases an egg less and less often, so estrogen and progesterone levels drop. The uterus lining ceases to thicken, so there is little or nothing to discharge. Menstruation stops, and the decline of ovarian hormones sparks elevation of pituitary hormones such as the luteinizing hormone. It is suspected that this rise of LH in the pituitary causes hot flashes. In addition, these dramatic changes to the endocrine organs