• Dr. Kathy Maupin, Founder and Medical Director of BioBalance HealthAs a medical doctor I treat men and women in the area of hormone replacement. I spend my day consulting with patients who have lost their sexual desire. In most cases, the loss of libido is a chemical issue; a direct result of the amount of testosterone the body produces. In men, testosterone is produced in the testes, and in women, the ovaries. Our bodies respond to the loss of testosterone with an increasing waist line, poor sleep, loss of muscles, lack of motivation, increase in depression and anxiety.

    For women, a decrease in testosterone, occurring up to 10 years before menopause, usually leads to a loss of libido. This is demonstrated through our thoughts, our need to be touched, and in our sudden lack of interest in conversations about sex and in sex itself. In women, the decrease in testosterone usually begins around the age of 40. For men, testosterone levels begin decreasing at the average age of 45. This decrease is referred to as andropause. It is accompanied by the loss of mental clarity, loss of exercise stamina, an increase in abdominal fat, poor sleep and anxiety. Furthermore, it can include a loss in morning erection, decrease in the quality of erection, and a change in the length of time one is able to sustain an erection.

    I treat men and women ranging in ages 40-70 who are happily restored to their youthful libido with the addition of bioidentical hormone therapy. These treatments involve inserting rice-sized pellets into the hip every 4-6 months. There are almost no side effects and they greatly improve quality of life and relationships. Before seeking a medical doctor, I encourage you to try regular aerobics, losing weight, and taking the supplement DIM (di-indolemethane; causes a decrease in estrone which is the hormone that binds up and inactivates testosterone).

    If you are interested in testosterone pellet therapy, please visit the website for my practice, BioBalance Health, at www.biobalancehealth.com to learn more about treatments. We treat patients from all over the world and I would love to help you.

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    Men and women have been told that getting older means acting older. Medicine has provided very little options for dealing with mood changes, diminished sex drives, and the hot flashes that accompany middle age. However, by taking non oral testosterone those conditions will disappear. Unfortunately, oral testosterone turns into estrogen in our liver. Estrogen is what creates old age symptoms and therefore needs to be avoided. The pellets that I provide for my patients are placed under the skin on the hip and then dissolve directly into the blood stream without converting into estrogen.

    Many people confuse HRT with fertility enhancement. HRT is about normalizing and stabilizing your physiology for many years beyond what your body history would have normally allowed.

    Neurotransmitters in the brain hinge off of testosterone. If we stop creating testosterone then we will have brain changes that affect the rest of our body, the rest of our domain. If we can prevent that loss with bio identical hormones then we can delay that process of decay.

    It’s common for patients to say that what they’ve heard from their own physician is that there is not research supporting the use of testosterone for anti-aging. In fact there are enormous amounts of research that spreads across multiple specialties. Dr. Maupin is able to present this research to spectacle patients helping them to understand that there is a safe way to combat their uncomfortable symptoms from aging.

    Download the transcription of this podcast.

     

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    Download the transcription of this podcast.

    The traditional medical protocol is that when someone gets sick they go to the doctor and are hopefully given a solution to treat their ailment. Recently the medical community has seen a turn towards a more holistic approach whereby physicians want to avoid symptom chasing and look at the body as a whole and treat the patient, not the symptoms.

    The aging process generally begins after 40. Testosterone is the first to go in men. In women, it is estrogen.  When testosterone drops in men they begin to have altered moods. Anything below 400 is considered a diminished level. The changes in both men and women also include loss of intensity in orgasm’s, diminished sexual desire, unbalanced moods, and increased anxiety.

    Medicine is now showing that menopausal and andropausal people don’t have to live with these symptoms. By replacing testosterone through pellets, the uncomfortable symptoms can be combated. I seriously believe that later life divorce is a result of imbalanced hormones. Because the loss of testosterone causes decreased libido our brains begin to think we don’t need our spouse this combined with fluctuating moods is recipe for marital disaster. By fixing the problem of testosterone loss, more marriages would survive.

    Delivery methods range widely.  Oral pills were the first to be introduced. More recently it has been shown that this is most non effective method because the testosterone is transformed to estrogen, which makes symptoms worse. When bioidenticals became popular, patches and creams came out. These are transdermal and are better than oral options. However, these still convert to estrogen although not as much as pills. The creams also must be applied frequently throughout the day. Sublingual tablets are a safe option and when used, must be taken once or twice a day. Finally there are hormone pellets that are subdermally placed under the skin. The absorption process of deterioration does not exist. The hormones go directly to the blood stream rather than through the liver first to be turned to estrogen. They are placed once every 3 months. I prefer this method because you only think about it 4 times a year, it’s relatively painless, and it’s the most effective way to introduce bioidentical testosterone into your body.

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    Dr. Kathy Maupin and family therapist Brett Newcomb talk about stories in the news today linking hormone therapy with cancer. In this interview, Dr. Maupin explains how the subdermal hormone pellet treatments that she offers at BioBalance Health are safe.

    What are your reactions to the way the press covers the issue of hormone therapy for postmenopausal women?

    How do you see the way the press handles these stories? Do you have concerns or reactions as a professional to the way the science of these stories is covered by reporters who are not scientifically trained?

    Talk about the WHI study in 2002 that was one of the beginnings of the concern spike regarding hormone replacement as a health care strategy for postmenopausal women?

    The use of generic labels such as “hormones” are misleading because they are non specific, and do not make use of distinctions among specific hormone groups that have clinical significance .

    Historically in medical research women have been minorities as research groups. Much of what was researched and the conclusions from the research was generalized from research done on men. One of the reasons for this was a concern about doing research on women who might be pregnant. Only in the last decade or so has serious broad spectrum research focusing on women been at the forefront of medical science. Can you speak to the reasons for these distinctions and the changes in the way science is beginning to look at medical research data on women.

    There was a period of time when hormone replacement therapy was the gold standard for the treatment of menopausal symptoms and the treatment of aging issues in women. There were 25000 studies documenting the efficacy of estrogen replacement for women.

    Then the WHI study came out in 2002. How has this changed thinking with regard to treating women?

    There is a story in the press today about hormone therapy increasing the risk of breast cancer. In a logic class this would be an example of what is called an undistributed major term. What does that mean and how does it apply to the article today and to other articles that appear in the mass media?

    Some people are afraid to consider hormone replacement therapy because they have heard “things” about it:

    1. they have heard that it causes cancer
    2. they do not make distinctions between types of hormones
    3. they do not know or make distinctions among types of or options for hormone replacements
    4. there are several types of hormone replacements delivery systems.

    What are the different types of hormone replacements or delivery systems that are available?

    Why are bioidenticals better?

    Why do pellets work better for what you do than other types of applications? What are the pros and cons?

    So in the end the takeaway is that you should ask your doctor?

    What are the risks to me if I take hormone replacement treatments?

    What are the risks to me if I do not take these treatments?

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  • The March 2010 edition of the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism states that decreased Free Testosterone (unbound to protein) in men caused by aging, disease, or trauma, leads to atherosclerosis of the aorta, which creates a high risk of Aortic Aneurism.

    It has long been accepted that low testosterone in aging men is associated with ill health: diabetes, frailty, osteoporosis, sexual malfunction, stroke, heart disease, and other illnesses associated with aging. This study was to determine if the Free Testosterone level was related to the lack of the Testosterone, as is heart disease.

    Researchers found a correlation between low Testosterone and Aortic Aneurism. In realizing this conclusion they also acknowledge that low testosterone is associated with high inflammation of the arteries, which is one of the sources of cardiac disease.

    This supports what I have been saying about preventing disease by replacing your missing Testosterone.

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    I was guest on the Dave Glover Show on FM Newstalk 97.1 in St. Louis, Missouri, March 16th 2010. We discussed treating men’s symptoms of low testosterone in men—or andropause—with bioidentical testosterone pellet therapy.

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  • A report published in the July 2009 edition of the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism states that when looking at health markers (levels of hormones, risk factors, etc.), low Testosterone for men and a low estradiol for women are markers for higher risk of death from other diseases.

    Dr. John Morley, local researcher, physician and head of geriatrics at St. Louis University, published an article stating that Testosterone supplementation improves spacial perception and eye hand coordination. He also reports that Testosterone helps older men improve bone density, and muscle mass and strength, making it possible for them to move around more easily.

    Dr. Ian Chapman from Australia found that treating both men and women in nursing homes with testosterone decreased the number of times they were hospitalized. He suggests that aging patients will benefit from Testosterone replacement.

    For information about Testosterone replacement therapy visit:

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  • For women who had a healthy sex drive before Andropause, the subtle loss of Libido is one of the most overwhelming changes that occurs in our thirties and forties. So many of my patients come to me crying because they don’t like their husbands anymore, and they are discouraged that the only answers they find from the medical community are to be told that they are depressed or crazy.

    If you wonder why you are no longer physically drawn to your husband, or suddenly start to ask yourself, “Why don’t I think of, dream of, or want sex anymore?” a lack of Testosterone is most likely your problem. Let’s talk about symptoms and Testosterone’s affect on Libido as we walk through a description of available treatments.
    Let’s begin by looking at Libido, or sex drive, and then how and why it disappears.

    Libido, Natural Aging and Testosterone

    Libido is the fire of life that causes us to bond to another human being, and to make a home and have children. It is the part of us that yearns to have someone touch and desire us. Sex drive is part of us as human beings and is not just the act of having sex, but an energy that is part of our lives. With it we feel normal and well, but without it life seems dull and boring for most of us.

    Libido is actually a hormone-controlled drive, and is dependent on the level of Free Testosterone in our blood stream. While it is hard for most of us to believe that a hormone has such a powerful effect on our brain, it is fact. Testosterone literally changes our motivations and what we think. Our highest Testosterone levels occur when we are in our teens, then level off until our forties and fifties when they decrease.

    Sexual Dysfunction, a common problem in women when we reach our forties, is one of the symptoms of loss of Libido. It has been blamed on many things, but most often, the reason we lose our Libido is natural aging, which causes a depletion of our Testosterone. Women lose Testosterone, which is secreted from our ovaries, in our forties. Men lose Testosterone, which is secreted from their testes, in their fifties, so there is a natural inequality between the sexes that often causes conflict based on differing sexual desires.

    Everything associated with the way our bodies work has a purpose. We have testosterone for Libido and fertility. It is only in recent history that clean water, medicines, vaccines and other health safeguards have increased our life span from an average of thirty to fifty years to the ninety to one hundred years we currently expect. We were created to have babies in our teens, when we were healthy, and to be old by thirty five or forty and die before fifty. Testosterone was meant to motivate us to conceive and continue the human race.

    Our hormones are the same as those of past generations, but modern society has improved our health, and therefore our life spans, so we now delay our adolescence into our late twenties and conceive in our thirties; our old age isn’t until we reach seventy or eighty. So, we have successfully learned how to live longer, but not better! Society’s success at improving our life span delayed childbearing, but Testosterone and our bodies are still on the old time table. To improve the quality of our lives and relationships we have to replace the missing hormone. Our natural drop of Testosterone now occurs during our most productive years, and generally at the peak of our married lives. While seeming like a dirty trick, it is actually just the natural design of our bodies. We have learned to extend the length of life, but now we must learn to lengthen the quality of our lives.

    In most cases our loss of sex drive is a slow subtle loss that is hard to pinpoint and happens years before menopause. This loss destroys our sex lives and quietly eats away at our marriages, just when we need our husbands the most! Medicine has not fully recognized this pre-menopausal problem. Current medical thought agrees that menopause is a factor in causing sexual problems, but does not yet widely accept the thought that Andropause, or loss of testosterone in women, is the first change, leading to total failure of our sexuality at menopause.

    I acknowledge those of you who are shaking your heads because you know people in their 70s who have wildly exciting sexual relationships; I agree there are exceptions to every rule. Some women always have a libido and they are blessed! Just as many women have no libido, ever, and that is usually impossible to treat with hormonal therapy.

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