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Archive for Hormone Imbalances

Question 2: What was going on in your life during (or before) the onset of your depression?

  • Did the depression start during (or after) a stressful time or event in your life?
  • Did you have a ‘break-down’?
  • Were there stressful things happening? (e.g. divorce, exams, death, job change, financial stress, relationship breakup, abuse (mental, emotional or physical,)) a stressful job (fireman, policeman, doctor, nightshift, etc.)
  • Were you exposed to a situation that put stress on your physical body? (e.g. surgery, accident, head injury, partying too hard with no sleep, pregnancy, exposure to a toxin (pesticide, heavy metals, etc?))

This question helps expose triggers for the depression that you have been suffering.

Stress is powerful. It is known that stressful events are one of the major risk factors for depression. Childhood trauma also plays a huge role for the development of major depression later on in life. Prolonged and/or extreme stress weakens the body’s adrenal glands. The role of the adrenal glands is to respond to and deal with stress. When the adrenal glands get wound up or worn out depression can result. There are powerful herbs, supplements, and medications that can feed and repair the adrenal glands. If your depression is caused by adrenal imbalances (or preceded by a major stressful event) these types of treatments and certain lifestyle changes can help resolve and eliminate fatigue and depression.

There’s also a biochemical imbalance known as ‘The Mauve Factor’ (formerly known as kryptopyrroles) that people with depression often have, which means they don’t deal with stress well. This biochemical imbalance seems to run in families too. If stress has been or still is one of your triggers for depression, or you have had depression from a child (or early on in life), it will be worth investigating the Mauve factor. The mauve factor can cause depression, Schizophrenia, autism and other behavioural problems.

The Mauve factor was first discovered in the 1950’s and it can be balanced (and the depression resolved) with high dose nutritional supplements. It is reasonably well-known by practitioner’s training in natural medicine and orthomolecular medicine, but it is not recognized by mainstream medicine. During the original research on the Mauve factor, there was considerable opposition by the standard psychiatric establishment against the nutritional and megavitamin therapy approach used to treat high-Mauve patients. The resistance, and therefore the Mauve Factor being relatively unknown today, is possibly due to pharmaceutical companies who produced tranquilizer drugs at the time being opposed to the research. I’ll discuss this biochemical imbalance again a little more in question 5 of this 7 part self help series.

Other physical trauma can give rise to depression in a number of ways. For example, head or neck injuries can lead to hormonal imbalances that can lead to depression. I’ve provided you with the following table below which has been copied from my recent book “Breaking Free: Exposing the biochemical causes of your depression”. It will give you a short summary and an insight into what types of stress, and physical trauma can give rise to depression and why (and hopefully reveal to you a possible physical cause for your depression).

If you have any questions or comments, please feel free to use the comment box below. I’d love to hear from you.

Sincerely

Dr Janelle Sinclair

Your AnswerWhat It Could MeanBiochemical Imbalance to Investigate Further
A physical ‘break-down’, divorce, exams, death of a loved one, job change, financial stress, relationship breakup, abuse (mental, emotional or physical), surgery, accident, partying too hard (no sleep), a stressful job.Stress weakens the body’s adrenal glands whose role it is to respond to and deal with stress. When the adrenal glands get worn out depression can result.

In certain individuals, stress can lead to high levels of a chemical in the body called the “Mauve Factor’. High levels of the “Mauve Factor” can cause depression. “High-Mauve” tends to run in families (especially those with a history of depression and other mental illnesses).
Chapter 3: The Mauve Factor

Chapter 7: Adrenal Imbalances
Neck surgeryNeck surgery can cause thyroid problems which can lead to depression.Chapter 6: Low Thyroid Function
Head injury or surgeryHead injury or surgery can damage the part of the brain that regulates hormone levels in the body. Low or high levels of certain hormones such as testosterone, estrogen, thyroid, and adrenal hormones (DHEA and cortisol) can lead to depression.Chapter 6: Low Thyroid Function

Chapter 7: Adrenal Imbalances

Chapter 8: Female Hormone Deficiencies

Chapter 9: Testosterone Deficiency in Men
Exposure to a toxin (pesticide, heavy metals)Exposure to a toxin, including pesticides, lead and mercury, can affect the function of the brain, and therefore depression.Chapter 5: Toxic Overload
PregnancyThe hormone deficiencies or fluctuations that can occur after childbirth can cause depression.
A growing baby needs lots of essential fatty acids (EFAs) to makes its body and brain and it gets them from you. You can become deficient in EFAs during pregnancy and that can cause depression.
Chapter 8: Female Hormone Deficiencies

Chapter 13: Essential Fatty Acid Deficiencies

To download a free report which discusses ALL of the 7 Self help Depression questions (and how to interpret them) visit http://www.breakingfreefromdepression.com

Hi. I’m glad you could join me today on the first blog in a 7 part series entitled “Seven powerful depression self help questions”.

Would you like to uncover the real cause of your depression? Well this series will help you do just that- it’ll help you understand whether there is a physical cause for your depression.

Physical causes of depression often go overlooked- so I encourage you to follow this 7 part series to make sure that you aren’t suffering from an undiagnosed nutrient deficiency, hormonal imbalance, food allergy or toxin that could be contributing to your depression.

I gave you a little sneak preview of question 1 last time- let me remind you what it is.

Question 1: Looking back, when did you experience the first signs of depression? What age were you?

The reason that asking this question is so important is that it can help reveal some of the triggers of depression, especially whether there are any hormonal triggers.

There are obviously a lot of potential answers to this question, but we’ll look at the following general answers.

When did your depression first start?

  1. over the age of 40
  2. around puberty
  3. always had it, or had it as a child

If you’re thinking to yourself- my answer doesn’t fit in with these options- that’s okay. It’s vey possible that age (or stage) is not a significant factor in your journey with depression. That is why we have 7 powerful depression self help questions rather than just 1. Hang in there.

Let’s start with Women: Over 40 years of age.

If women experience their first bout of depression during their forties, it is highly likely that the hormonal imbalances, brought on by menopause (or peri-menopause), is the cause.

Peri-menopause describes the stage in which the first symptoms of menopause are experienced up until at least one year after a women’s final menstrual period. Peri-menopause is usually experienced between the ages of 45-50 and normally lasts for 4 years (but could be felt as early as the age of 35). Menopause is defined as the time in a woman’s life when menstrual periods permanently stop as a result of a loss of ovarian function.

Peri-menopause is characterized by widely fluctuating hormone levels along with an overall decline in first progesterone and then estrogen levels. The hormone levels can be different every single day, and this can go on for years. These hormone deficiencies and fluctuations are often the cause of the depressive symptoms and the other mood changes experienced during the different stages of a woman’s life

The depression that women suffer, because of these hormonal changes, are not just mild. They can lead to major depressive disorder. In an interesting study which followed women with no history of depression over an eight year period, 50% of those going through peri-menopausal had an increase in depressive symptoms, and 26% received a formal diagnosis of major depressive disorder. The good news is that the right hormonal treatments can help resolve the depression in the large majority of patients.

I have a whole chapter in my book about the hormonal imbalances that can lead to depression in females- not just around menopause, but for those that suffer from postnatal depression and premenstrual syndrome (PMS). It discusses the symptoms of these hormonal deficiencies, the tests to diagnose the imbalances, treatment options (supplements, herbs and hormone medications), and also provides the scientific evidence that you can give your doctor (so that they will agree to help you and will know how to help you).

Men: Over 40 years of age.

Women aren’t the only ones to suffer from hormonal imbalances as they age.  The same goes for men in their forties, fifties, and sixties – men can have their own form of ‘menopause’ which is often known as andropause.

As men age their testosterone levels decrease (testosterone is also known as an androgen hormone- hence the name andropause). When testosterone and the other androgen hormones are too low men can experience depression. Other symptoms of a testosterone deficiency include fatigue, lowered assertiveness, increased body fat (obesity), decreased muscle mass and strength, lowered sex drive and erectile dysfunction.

Recent studies show that men with depression are 2.7 times more likely to have low testosterone levels than men without depression. More exciting is the fact that the latest clinical trials have proven that testosterone supplementation can resolve depression in more than 50% of older males with depression.

There is also a specific chapter in my recent book that is devoted to the topic of testosterone deficiency in men. It will not only show you how to diagnose a testosterone deficiency (and how to make sure that your doctor doesn’t miss the diagnosis), it will also provide the latest medical research on the topic. It’s highly likely that your doctor doesn’t know that a testosterone deficiency can cause depression. To make sure that you get the help you need, I have included the references, the most important studies and the right doses of supplements and medications for treating this hormonal deficiency.

This is becoming a bit of a long blog today. This information is just the tip of the iceberg- there’s so much to share with you. But I’ll leave it there for now, and next time I’ll discuss what it could possibly mean, if you have been suffering with depression since puberty or since you were a child.

I’d love to hear your comments and questions. I pray that this information will help bring you the freedom that you need in your life.

Sincerely

Dr Janelle Sinclair

To download a free report which discusses ALL of the 7 Self help Depression questions (and how to interpret them) visit http://www.breakingfreefromdepression.com