Menopause
$47.00
Description
Are you or someone you love suffering from menopause and associated symptoms? At Universal Sound Therapy we deal with all sorts of issues including menopause with our sound therapies.
How?
Our therapy is based on frequencies, tuning your body to vibrate at the correct frequency is as important to your body healing itself or reducing symptoms you are facing. Our healing sessions provide your body with the frequencies that would be found in a normal, healthy body. Your system absorbs these frequencies and makes the needed changes to “tune itself” and start to heal. Our bodies want to be healthy and when we provide them with the proper tools they will do everything needed to do just that.
Universal Sound Therapy is in the business to help your body heal and we are so confident that it will work for you that we offer you a 90-day money back guarantee. And if our menopause sound therapy CD doesn’t help, just return it for a full refund. Try to get that from your doctor or pharmacy.
Our Menopause sound therapy CD’s help by:
- Decrease or minimize occurrence of night sweats, hot flashes, or anxiety due to menopause
- Has the correct frequencies to help your body retune itself
- Aligns and opens your Chakra system
- Opens and cleans up your meridians
- Helps your body heal itself
Short Description of Menopause
Menopause is the period in a woman’s life where she stops having her menses and is no longer able to get pregnant naturally.
Symptoms of Menopause
- Hot flashes
- Night sweats
- Vaginal dryness and discomfort during sex
- Difficulty sleeping
- Low mood or anxiety
- Reduced libido
- Issues with concentration and memory
About Menopause
Menopause is the period that marks the cessation of your menstrual cycles. Women are diagnosed to already be in menopause if they have gone for at least 12 months without having a period. Menopause can occur in your 40s and 50s but the average age in the US is 51 years of age. It is a natural biological process but there are physical symptoms that women experience such as hot flashes and emotional symptoms. The symptoms can even disrupt their sleep, lower your energy level and even have an effect on your emotional health. There are treatments available ranging from lifestyle modifications to hormone replacement therapy and sound therapy.
Etiology of Menopause
The signs and symptoms of menopause vary among women. When estrogen and progesterone levels decline, most likely women will experience some form if menstrual irregularity in their periods before eventually ceasing. Hot flashes are common and skipping menses during the peri menopausal stage is as well although there is nothing to be worried about. More often than not, menstrual periods will begin to skip a month and then resume, or skip several months and then begin monthly cycles once more for a few months. Periods also tend to happen on shorter cycles, so they feel closer together. Even if you are having symptoms of irregular periods, you still can get pregnant. If you happen to skip a period but are not sure if you have begun the menopausal transition, try to get a pregnancy test.
Menopause may happen from the ff:
Natural Decline of Reproductive Hormones — As women approaches their late 30s, the ovaries begin to make less hormone levels of estrogen and progesterone – the primary hormones that regulate menses. Once this happens fertility also declines. When you are in your 40s, your menses can become shorter or longer, lighter or heavier, and more or less frequent, until on average by age 51, the ovaries stop releasing eggs and you have complete cessation of menses.
- Surgery – The ovaries are the ones responsible for producing the hormones estrogen and progesterone and these regulate your cycle. If you have surgery such as an oophorectomy to remove the ovaries it causes immediate menopause. The periods stop and you will likely have hot flashes and feel many of the other signs and symptoms of menopause. These can be severe, as hormonal changes occur abruptly rather than a gradual onset over a period of several years.
Surgery that removes the uterus but not the ovaries usually does not cause immediate menopause. Although, you no longer get periods, the ovaries sill release eggs and produce progesterone and estrogen.
- Chemotherapy and Radiotherapy – Cancer treatment can induce symptoms of menopause resulting to symptoms like hot flashes during or shortly after the treatment course. The cessation of menses is not always permanent following chemo, so birth control measures may still be necessary. Radiation only affects ovarian function if it is directed at the ovaries. Radiation treatment to other parts of the body such as the breast, head and neck will have no effect on menopause.
- Primary Ovarian Insufficiency – Approximately 1% of women will have menopause by the time they are 40 and this is called premature menopause. It can result from the failure of the ovaries to produce normal levels of reproductive hormones estrogen and progesterone, which may come from autoimmune disease or genetic factors. However, there is no obvious cause for premature menopause that has been discovered. For these affected women, hormone replacement therapy is recommended to symptoms of hot flashes, mood changes etc. at least until the natural age of menopause is reached in order to prevent bone loss, brain and heart dysfunction.
Diagnosis of Menopause
A woman is considered to have menopause when there is no menstrual periods for 12 months.
Complications of Menopause
- Heart Disease – When the estrogen levels are reduced, the risk of developing cardiovascular disease goes up. Heart disease is the leading cause of death in women and men. It is vital to get regular exercise, a balanced diet and maintain a normal healthy weight.
- Osteoporosis – Reduced estrogen and progesterone causes the bones to become brittle or hollow with reduced bone mass thereby increasing the risk of developing fractures. During the 1st few years of undergoing menopause, bone loss can be seen at a rapid rate, increasing the risk of developing the condition. For post-menopausal women with osteoporosis, fractures of the spine, hips and wrists are more common. Hormone replacement therapy can help prevent further bone loss.
- Urinary Incontinence – When the tissue supporting the vagina and urethra lose their elasticity, you may experience frequent, sudden, strong urges to urinate. This is followed by an involuntary loss of urine called urge incontinence, or the loss of urine from coughing, laughing or lifting (also known as stress incontinence. Increasing the strength of the pelvic muscles are therefore a must. Kegel exercises and using a topical vaginal estrogen can help relieve the symptoms. Hormone therapy combined with sound therapy is also an effective treatment option as well.
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