Showing posts with label menopause after. Show all posts
Showing posts with label menopause after. Show all posts

Thursday, May 19, 2011

What sedative can i use for my mother who is going through menopause?


Klara

lol.... http://answers. yahoo. com/question/index?…



Lyda

A tranquilizer gun?



Sharell

You can't sedate her. It takes years to go through it. Geez grow up.



Cammie

....in most cases, not only the menopausal woman needs tranquillizer, but those around her too..... Not to say, they are the ones who mostly need it...



Charlette

Have her turn a couple of your doorknobs.



Kathern

I think a sedative may be too much. You can instead try to make her relax and de-stress. Lavender has anti-depressant qualities and can be used in teas and some dessert foods. Mustard is a diuretic and a tonic. Thyme also has other good qualities which can help with menopausal symptoms. You can incorporate the above herbs fresh or dried into your food. Drinking lavender, chamomile and evening primrose tea can have a wonderful calming effect to relieve stress levels, which may rise during menopause.



Reform
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Monday, May 2, 2011

I am 53 and have had no symptoms of menopause but have not had a period for 2 years i am healthy and have ha?


Shalon

my yearly physical. Is this unusual can I have been through menopause without any symptoms?



Randi

It could be what they call the peri-menopause which is like pre-menapause.



Hyun

Relax, all woman have to stop their period at some point, my friends mam has alreadybstopped hers, you stop between 40-60, so maybe you have stopped ypur cycle. I you are worried hinder a doctor



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Sunday, February 27, 2011

In the latest study that exonerates menopause as a cause of impairing the ability to recall, Taiwanese researchers compared the memory of hundreds of women before they had any menopausal symptoms to their memory as they entered menopause.

The women were between the ages of 40 and 54. None of them had had a hysterectomy, and none took hormone replacement therapy during the study.

All took five cognitive tests designed to assess their memory and cognitive skills at the start of the study, and then again 18 months later.

During the study period, 23 percent of the women began to have symptoms of menopause.

The researchers then compared the memory of the women who had entered menopause to those who had not, and found very little difference. In four of the five tests, there were no statistically significant differences in the two groups of women.