• Bioidentical testosterone pellets can cure chronic fatigue.

    BioBalance Healthcast episode 58, Treating Chronic Fatigue with Bioidentical Hormone Pellets

    Download the transcription of this podcast.

    On episode 58 of the BioBalance Healthcast, Brett Newcomb and I talk about chronic fatigue, the symptoms, diagnoses and treatment with bioidentical testosterone pellet therapy.

    The symptoms associated with chronic fatigue are severe fatigue following a flu-like illness, abrupt onset of fatigue after the viral infection, exhaustion after any exertion or exercise. Night sweats occur in half of the patients with chronic fatigue.

    The sources of this medical problem are immune system dysfunction, low cortisol, low ACTH and a low level testosterone.

    The diagnostic tests essential for evaluation are CBC (blood count), thyroid panel, ANA, 8 AM Cortisol level and ACTH level, testosterone levels, and growth Hormone levels.

    If you have been told that you have chronic fatigue, and traditional medical therapy has not worked for you, BioBalance Health Testosterone therapy will improve the immune system, and therefore improve many symptoms of chronic fatigue. Many patients who thought they would have to live mired down with fatigue, have found the answer with us. Patients who have been struggling with this syndrome, tell me that they have their lives back, by replacing the hormone they needed testosterone!

  • Good Doctors diagnose with SOAP—Subjective, Objective, Assessment, and Plan.

    BioBalance Healthcast episode 53 - The Diagnostic Process, How Doctors Think

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    In episode 53 of the BioBalance Healthcast, Dr. Kathy Maupin and Brett Newcomb describe the diagnosis process doctors are trained to use when talking to patients about medical issues and creating a treatment plan.

    Doctors all go into medical school, normal human beings, or at least mostly normal, and matriculate with minds that think in a deductive way in order to reach an answer to the proble brought to them by their patients. The process of teaching us how to think, completely wipes out our hard drive, and reprograms us. I believe it is important for patients to undersand how doctors think, so as patients you can give them the most important information, in the most efficient manner, so they spend most of their time problem solving and not extracting the information they need to begin to problem solve. In this world created by managed care doctors have very little time with you face to face so why not make that time the most efficient for you?

    The structure, or order, of the visit is evidenced in the notes doctors write:
    S= Symptoms or complaints of the patient
    O= Observations, physical exam, vital signs, what you look like
    A= Assessment is the initial thought or impression that the doctor has about your problem.
    P= Plan or lab tests, radiology, medications, exercise, diet, and when to return.

    Help Your Doctor Understand Your Problem Quickly!
    That’s it! So, your doctor will enter the room and ask you what’s wrong. At this moment you should tell him or her: 1) Your most problematic symptom, when it started, how severe it is, where you feel or see it, if it is constant or intermittent, and why you are worried about it.

    That’s very efficient and it does not confuse the doctor with unnecessary information. My mother in law was truly my favorite relative. She lived with us for the most important 7 years of our daughter’s life and was integral to her brilliance and humor, however she was always a difficult patient to pin down. I would go with her to the doctor and it literally took her a full 15 minutes to tell the problem to the doc. It was intermixed with what she ate today, the subjects of her dreams, her friends illnesses and somewhere in there she would tell the doctor what was wrong. Thankfully she was blessed with patient doctors. After 7 years I had coached her to ten minutes of unrelated symptoms, and helped her doctor by handing him a sheet of paper of her symptoms and the important related problems.

    So if you want great care you have to learn to play the doctor train of thought game and start with the main problem. If you are helping an aging parent or a child spend the time on the way to the doctor sorting through the flotsom to get to the problem, and then help them rehearse their symptom description. If you are unable to go to the doctor with a talkative relative, or even a non-talkative teenager, it is acceptable to fax or email the problem and the symptomatology (What, where, when ) to the doctor before the visit to help her.

    Your Doctor Should look At You, When they Talk to You and When They Examine You
    To diagnose your problem, a doctor needs clues, and after taking your history, your clues are contained in your face, skin tone, skin turgor (tightness, or swelling), bumps, lumps, discolorations etc. Your doctor must LOOK AT YOU to get these pieces of information. If you look totally different than you feel, then tell the doctor that you always look better than you feel so they take you seriously!

    I often see patients who come to me, and complain that their doctor types throughout the office visit and never looks at them. This is a mistake of the modern age, as most of us can write without looking, the majority of us cannot type without paying attention, so doctors aren’t getting the clues needed to arrive at the right tests or diagnosis. Vital signs are a pain but generally essential to a Primary Care doctors diagnosis.

    Your Doctor will Come To a Conclusion about what is wrong or a list of what Could Be Wrong.
    The third step is problem solving. This is the fun part for me, when I have most of the information and I decide what the problem is, or what possibilities are on my list to rule in or out. This part takes rest and time. Generally your doctor will let you in on the things he or she is looking for, or what it could be. If not, then ASK! It is your visit and even though you have to fit your symptoms into a form that is efficient for the doctor, she should tell you what she is thinking of, and what tests or medications you will require.

    The Plan: Steps by Step Plan for Diagnosing your Problem

    Last but not least, is the list of things you or she needs to do to get to the answer. This is not a secret. Ask for a copy of the plan or take your own notes. It should include drugs needed, expected results, or lab tests, and instructions before the test, radiology scheduling or other testing, and most important, instructions on when to come back and how to get your results and the DIAGNOSIS.

    If you came to the doctor’s office with a problem and you leave without a plan, don’t leave. It is like going to the grocery store, spending time picking out your food, paying and then not being allowed to leave with you food!

    This is how doctors think—we want to be your doctor-patient type of friend and know what is going on in your life, but if you have a problem, you must switch from a social visit like is common for check ups, to a business meeting, that takes concentration and no extraneous information.

    Just like in the service (Marines, Army, Navy) doctors are reprogrammed during training and they are likely unaware that they get the process but you don’t. I believe if you get the diagnostic process you will be much happier with the results of your problem visits and your doctor.

    Visit BBH.com for more info about bioidentical hormones/anti-aging/skin care.

  • The Federal Drug Administration regulates testosterone as a treatment for symptoms of menopause.

    BioBalance Healthcast episode 52 on Off-label Use of Medicines as it Relates to Testosterone

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    Episode 52 of the BioBalance Healthcast features a conversation about the use off-label medicines and how that relates to treating symptoms of menopause with bioidentical testosterone. If you missed it, you might want to watch episode 51 titled Testosterone and the FDA.

    Bioidentical Testosterone is safe and legal as a treatment for symptoms of menopause.

    Off-llabel Drug Use is the common practice of using drugs for purposes not originally approved by the Food and Drug Administration. Terbutaline is a great example. It is an FDA-approved generic asthma drug that was also used an effective way to stop premature labor.

    Ramifications of off-label use are sometimes significant beyond the expansion of drug use. Terbutaline is a good example. It has been replaced in the last decade with a similar and more expensive drug for its non-approved use, prevention of pre-term labor. As a result, it was never approved by the FDA for this purpose; until it was replaced, however, it saved the lives of millions of babies.

    If a medication has become generic, then it is not patentable, or “own-able” exclusively by any company. As a result, there is no opportunity for profit. It is therefore no longer cost-effective for a pharmaceutical company to pay for this high cost of research on the second use of the drug when the company has no possibility of realizing a return on the investment, much less a profit. And if there is no pharmaceutical company championing a drug for a certain disease, it is unlikely the FDA will approve it for that that purpose, regardless of its proven effectiveness!

    Hormones like testosterone fall into a similar category as generic drugs. Because hormones are natural, they are not “unique, and hence not patentable. With no financial incentive to produce unpatentable drugs, there are no investment dollars to support testing in a way the FDA requires. So generic drugs and natural hormones like testosterone remain untested for any but a narrow set of uses.

    The first issue centers around the age and medical condition of the patient using it. Most negative reports are related to the use of testosterone in young, healthy men – usually athletes and body builders — who naturally have excellent levels of testosterone, and who are attempting to artificially augment their testosterone beyond normal physiologic levels to increase muscle mass, strength or athletic skill.

    This misuse of testosterone is indeed very dangerous, and richly deserving of its bad press, because it turns off the user’s own production of testosterone from the testicles and adversely affects the function of adrenal gland. This can in turn lead to infertility, adrenal failure and a life-long struggle to regain health.

    Because testosterone is in demand for these illicit purposes, but can only be obtained legally from a licensed physician, a black market has arisen on the internet where weight lifters and athletes can obtain “forms” of testosterone for injection from the eastern bloc countries. I have interviewed body-builders and lifters who get their “testosterone” to improve their bodies or their competitive edge, but they usually have no idea what is really in these injections except what the “seller” says is in them. Nevertheless, in their desire for a better body than God gave them, or for an illegal leg up on the competition, they inject these knock offs, with risks and side-effects too alarming and too numerous to discuss here.

    This, then, is the scariest of all uses of a product labeled “testosterone,” because it is most likely not the same safe, effective, testosterone regulated by the FDA and administered by licensed physicians. It is more than likely a truly unknown testosterone-based substance. Equally concerning is the fact that it is usually administered by an untrained and unlicensed individual, usually a coach or the athlete himself.

    If bio-identical hormones like testosterone are essential and helpful, why are they “FDA regulated, but not approved” for hormone replacement in women? The answer is the same as that for generic or other non-patentable drugs: no company has petitioned the FDA to test and approve testosterone replacement for women.

    The FDA’s simple regulation of the drug is enough for me at this time. Because bio-identical hormones have been “grandfathered” into the FDA oversight, physicians are free to prescribe them, as I do, for off-label uses. Consequently, millions of women can and do legally and safely use bio-identical hormones, including testosterone, for hormone replacement therapy. Many cannot tolerate any other hormone preparation than pellets.

    As the ultimate pharmacists, physicians have the training to look at a drug like testosterone and say, “I know it works for the FDA-approved diagnosis, but this may also work for another condition, or another population (i.,e. women) because of its chemical and physiologic properties.”

  • Report says silicone implants are safe, Dr. Maupin says they’re not the best available.

    BioBalance Healthcast episode 50 Breast Implants

    Download the transcription of this podcast.

    In episode 50 of the BioBalance Healthcast episode, Brett Newcomb and I discuss breast implants based on a recent New York Times article which quotes Dr. William Maisel from Food and Drug Administration’s Center for Devices as saying silicone breast implants are safe, but more study needs to be done.

    Brett comments that in this report, the FDA is sending of “definite maybe” message, and stresses that careful consideration is still required by women and their physicians before implant surgery is performed. The report mentions potential side effect with breast implant surgery as in any surgery, including infection, wound issues, scarring, pain. Asymmetry is a problem unique to breast implant surgery and can occur based the type of implantation being done. There is a new type of implant on the market that solves the asymmetry problem, as long as both breasts are being replaced, mentioned later in this podcast.

    Implants are often used by breast cancer patients who have their beasts removed, but are more frequently used for cosmetic reasons. Although I don’t do breast implants, I’ve done breasts exams on thousands of women over the past 25 years, so I know which of my patients have them. I have found no indication of breast cancer occurring more in women who have had implants verses no implants, or with silicone or saline implants.

    Sometimes, as a young woman goes through menarche, her breasts grow unevenly. Doctors recommend to waiting until breast development stops, before either performing a reduction on the larger breast, or placing an implant in the smaller one.

    Contents of breast implants have changed over the years. Silicone implants are bags filled with silicone with a silicone covering. Implants are placed under the skin or under the muscle based on anatomy or preference of the surgeon. Silicone didn’t age well, sometimes hardening, leaking or rupturing. Additional surgery is needed in these cases.

    There was a huge scare about breast implants a while back that incorrectly tied implants to hormonal problems. Women in their forties were complaining of fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue, rheumatoid arthritis, and other problems, thinking these common symptoms of menopause were the result of their implants. Women were terrified, and had them removed; it’s better to have them removed rather than live with the anxiety. Misinformation like this can go viral, so it is up to women to get the correct information.

    The popularity of saline implants resulted in bad press that silicone implants received. Many women paid to have their silicone implants replace with saline implants. Due to lawsuits, insurance companies were paying women to have this replacement surgery done. Saline implants didn’t feel as natural as the silicone implants—feeling more like a bag full of water—and cosmetically didn’t look as good. Saline needs to be replaced every ten years.

    The newest implant device is known as the Gummi Bear implant, which is by far the most natural looking.

    Visit BBH.com for more info about bioidentical hormones/anti-aging/skin care.

  • Pellets are the best vehicle for bioidentical hormones.

    BioBalance Healthcast episode 49 Patches, Pills or Pellets best method for bioidentical hormones image

    Download the transcription of this podcast.

    In episode 49 of the BioBalance Healthcast, we continue our series dealing with bioidentical hormones in the news. Brett Newcomb and I discuss a recent news report that compared patches and pills. We add important detail to the discussion of these methods and then describe my preferred hormone delivery system, bioidentical pellets.

    Patches carrying estradiol, or estradiol and progestin, are applied to the hip or addomen to provide the body with the additional hormones transdermally—or through the skin. Pills that are swallowed go from the stomach to the liver where they are broken down to make estrone—or “old lady estrogen.” Estrone is just what menopausal women don’t need more of because it causes several negative effects. Estradiol pellets that are inserted into the vagina are designed to deliver estrogen just to the vaginal wall so it is not a good way to get the hormone distributed throghout the body.

    The best delivery method is—and the one I use almost exclusively—is bioidentical estradiol and testosterone pellets inserted subcutaneously, in the fatty portions of the hip or thigh, three or four times per year.

    The overall conclusion in regards to bioidentical hormone therapy is that patches are healthier than pills, but not as good as pellets.

  • Symptoms of aging are treated with bioidentical testosterone at BioBalance Health

    BioBalance Healthcast episode 46, Chronic Fatigue and Fibromyalgia

    Download the transcription of this podcast.

    In episode 46 of the BioBalance Healthcast we discuss how my practice differs from my competition, and two of the most common symptoms my patients complain about.

    Regarding my practice:

    • I practiced as an OB/GYN for 25 years.
    • I perfected BioBalance Health by listening to my patients
    • We charge on a pay-as-you-go basis, not by yearly retainer
    • My patients don’t want to come office visits every month, I treat them a few times a year
    • I interview my patients, reviewing their blood test results with them before prescribing dosage
    • Following the initial visits, they just come in for pellet insertions
    • I try very hard to limit waiting times
    • My Nurse Practitioners do the insertions; they understand hormones better than most doctors
    • I customized my instruments to decrease the size of the insertion, minimizing the size of the scars
    • My competition requires monthly lab tests and visits for insertion
    • My practice offers the most efficient, cost effective treatment available

    About Fibromyalgia and Chronic Fatigue

    • Fibromyalgia and chronic fatigue have a connection, so they are often confused
    • Both symptoms cause a bone-tiredness that is worse than what can be caused by hormone deficiency
    • Fibromyalgia—caused by a virus—is an autoimmune disease that causes your immune system to attack body tissue
    • Fibromyalgia causes traveling pain, moving to different parts of the body
    • Chronic fatigue is also a virus that compromises the autoimmune system and is generally caused by lack of testosterone
    • Both are treated with bioidentical hormone pellets

    For more information about BioBalance Bioidentical Pellet Treatment, visit the BioBalance Health website.

  • Testosterone Deprivation Syndrome is a major cause of Dementia and Alzheimer’s Disease

    BioBalance Healthcast episode 44, Dementia and Alzheimer's Disease image

    Download the transcription of this podcast.

    Episode 44 of the BioBalance Healthcast deals with causes and treatment for avoiding dementia and Alzheimer’s disease. Brett Newcomb and I explain six things women should know:

    1. Women must understand that they are not just aging, but have a natural condition which has been misdiagnosed or undiagnosed.
    2. Women must understand the correct diagnosis for these symptoms that I call “Testosterone Deprivation Syndrome.”
    3. Women must learn about the easy and effective treatment for this syndrome, bioidentical hormone pellet therapy.
    4. Women must ask their doctors about treatment for this syndrome.
    5. Medical professionals must provide support for your personal quest for this treatment.
    6. Medical professionals must stop unnecessary suffering caused by the lack of proper diagnosis and treatment.

    For more information about bioidentical hormone pellet therapy, visit the BioBalance Health website.

  • Our bioidentical hormone treatment makes you feel good, our skin rejuvenation makes you look great!

    BioBalance Healthcast episode 43, BioBalance Health Skin Rejuvenation image

    Download the transcription of this podcast.

    In BioBalance Healthcast episode 43 we review our skin rejuvenation services.

    • Pixel Fractional Skin Resurfacing removes wrinkles, stimulates collagen, improves Rosacea and tightens skin. Because this treatment can be painful, we administer pain medication before and after treatments.
    • Intermittent Pulse Laser (IPL) Skin Rejuvenation treats age spots, fine lines, sun damage, melasma and poor skin tone.
    • Jet Peel exfoliates and hydrates the face and neck. It delivers moisture, vitamins and nutrients into your skin with a jet of micro-droplets.

    In addition to our BioBalance Health Skin Rejuvenation services, we offer a full line of botanical skin care products.

  • Rules for making a decision on getting bioidentical hormone pellet therapy.

    BioBalance Healthcast episode 41, 12 rules to consider when getting bioidentical hormone therapy image

    Download the transcription of this podcast.

    On episode 41 of the BioBalance Healthcast we present the remaining six rules of my list of 12 to follow when making the decision to start bioidentical hormone pellet therapy. These rules are a process you should apply before making that important medical decision.

    • TSH test normals are different for men and women.
    • Basal body temperatures are critical data to consider for hypothyroidism.
    • Remember to look at the whole picture for a gland and not focus on one specific hormone.
    • Remember when looking at individual hormone levels the Pituitary’s stimulatory process must be checked before and after interventions.
    • Generally, when a doctor says your tests are normal, it means that the tests he ran are within normal values.
    • Remember: Unless your doctor is trained and current in his knowledge of hormone tests, the recommendations you receive may not be accurate.

    Listen to episode 40, Are You a Candidate for Bioidentical hormone Therapy? Part 2.

  • Beware of products advertised as relief from symptoms of aging.

    BioBalance Healthcast episode 39 Alternatives to BioBalance Bioidentical Hormone Pellets image

    Download the transcription of this podcast.

    On episode 39 of the BioBalance Healthcast we talk about advertised drugs and treatments that are not really replacements for bioidentical hormone pellet therapy.

    My co-host, Brett Newcomb, and I talk about the products on the market today that claim to relieve symptoms of aging.

    My research shows that most of these products for age management are either unregulated substances from China—which can be dangerous—or they are new names for old substances; a way to market an inexpensive product at a higher price.

    Many of the new products depend on the confusing names of the substances included, that sound unique, but are the chemical names for common vitamins and herbs.

    Non-prescription Products

    Botanicals: cheap and fairly effective is saw palmetto. If there is a new product that is not prescription then it is generally a version of known plants or herbs, that are available in health food stores.

    Here are a few examples:

    For Men: Ageless Male.

    • Mechanism: decreases DHT
    • Re-Setin-proprietary—no studies—from China
    • Saw Palmetto
    • Astaxin—supports joints, eye health, 4 mg/dose, is an algae, that makes chlorophyll, and highest and best use is protection from the sun damage, UVA sun rays.
    • Other substances that increase neurotransmitters

    For Women: Amberen

    • MSG—Increases salt and water retention and headaches
    • works for some for hot flashes, but not for testosterone deficit symptoms
    • might be better for increasing healing and stopping aging

    Points To Consider:

    • Where were the products made?
    • How well regulated are they?
    • Is there consistency in the manufacturing process?
    • Are supplies consistently available?
    • Is this product essentially a repackaging and renaming of an established product or a previous product?
    • Is there a human being (or medical professional) available for consultation? And communication? Can you talk to a real person or are you just buying mass market products from China or Russia? Will your experience be similar to getting computer technology advice from India?
    • Are the ingredients common ingredients you can get at a good health food store that have packaged and called something else?

    For more information about bioidentical hormone pellet treatment visit my website. For in-depth information, review my list of hormone medical articles references.

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