Hormonal & Medical Complete Screen
Levitas Clinic offers a bespoke treatment plan involving bio-identical hormones and global innovative options.
Call us on 0207 4594 854 to make an appointment to see your private GP at Levitas Clinic
Bio-identical Hormones
BHRT is a process of re balancing the naturally occurring hormones which have depleted due to age.
Bio-identical Hormones are plant-derived hormones that are identical in chemical structure to those found in the human body. The hormones are prescribed and produced based on each individual requirement. They are prepared in a compounding pharmacy.
Bio-identical Hormone Replacement Therapy
- Menopause
- Andropause (male menopause)
- Other hormone-related conditions
- Premenstrual syndrome (PMS)
- Endometriosis
- Polycystic ovarian syndrome
- Thyroid dysfunction
- Pre-menstrual syndrome
- Depression
- Postnatal depression maintain a woman’s health, energy, mood and brain
- Perimenopause
- Menopause
- Pre-menstrual syndrome
- Depression
- Postnatal depression
- Thyroid dysfunction
Hormones for Men
Many people assume menopause is just a woman’s condition. However, it is not the case as men also suffer from menopause and the effects of changing hormones. Many men experience some of the same symptoms that women experience in perimenopause (meaning around menopause) and menopause, including low sex drive, hot flashes, depression, irritability, mood swings, increased body fat and decreased energy.
Male menopause, also known as andropause, is the result of a gradual decrease in testosterone. Testosterone is an androgen. Male menopause is not the same type of menopause that women go through. For this reason, doctors usually refer to “male menopause” as low testosterone, testosterone deficiency or androgen decline in the aging male.
Male menopause, or andropause, differs from female menopause, which occurs when the production of female hormones drops suddenly. Andropause is a gradual decline in hormone levels. The ovaries run out of the substance it needs to make testosterone. This does not happen with the testicles.
Testosterone levels in men gradually decline throughout the course of adulthood. This happens about 1 percent a year after the age of 30 on average. The loss of testosterone is rarely noticeable in men younger than 60. And by the time men reach their 80s, about half have low testosterone.
As testosterone and andropause levels decrease men will feel a difference in the points below:
- Decreased erection frequency and
- firmness
- Low libido
- Depressed mood
- Difficulty losing weight
- Trouble gaining muscle with exercise
- Decreased exercise performance
Fatigue
Adrenal Fatigue and Hormonal Imbalance
How do the adrenal glands help us cope with stress?
How are your sex hormones connected to adrenal exhaustion?
Progesterone is synthesized fairly early in the hormonal cascade, and its activity is highly influenced by the level of stress – either physical or emotional that a woman is experiencing. To explain this further, let’s talk about pregnenolone steal or progesterone steal. Pregnenolone is the primary “precursor” hormone. The primary decision the body makes with pregnenolone is whether it wants to makes sex hormones like progesterone or stress hormones like cortisol. If a woman is stressed, her body “steals” the pregnenolone and uses it for stress hormone production instead eg making more cortisol (especially if your levels of cortisol are dropping because the adrenals are becoming exhausted). However other hormones can be affected too in this turmoil, hence your Dr or therapist may find low hormonal levels across the board. But progesterone will be the one that is hardest hit. The body is basically ‘stealing’ this hormone to allow you to produce more cortisol in order to ‘cope’.
- Symptoms associated with Blood sugar imbalances (hungry all the time, the need to snack, light-headed—jittery without food) or the use of drugs, such as caffeine, sugar and alcohol to ramp up energy and mood
- Digestive problems
- Poor immune system leading to
- frequent infections, and
- inflammatory symptoms
- Hormonal problems such as PMS, low libido, fertility problems.
- Mental and physical fatigue
- Depression
- Sleep problems and insomnia
- Headaches
- Low blood pressure
- Persisting fatigue
- Depression
- Anxiety
- Hypersensitivity to noise
- Loss of libido
- Dry eyes
- Dry skin and hair
- Loss of head hair
Treatment Schedule
1
Initial Consultation
The doctor may take bloods or arrange sputum tests. (There will be additional charges for these tests).
2
Follow up Consultation (after return of tests) between 1 week and 1 month
3
3 month follow up
4
From then 6 monthly follow ups
Medication reviews, medical check up and examination where needed.