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  2. This Menopause Side Effect Was Overlooked. Now Doctors Are ...

    www.aol.com/menopause-side-effect-overlooked-now...

    During menopause, your body and brain undergo some radical shifts that can contribute to the development of an eating disorder. New hormone fluctuations not only impact your sleep and mood but can ...

  3. Doctors Answer Your Most Pressing Menopause Questions ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/doctors-answer-most-pressing...

    Here’s what you can do until then: • Vaginal dryness: Estrogen thickens the lining of the walls of the vagina, so when levels of the hormone drop, that vaginal tissue thins and becomes dry ...

  4. Enclomifene - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enclomifene

    Enclomiphene is a selective estrogen receptor antagonist, antagonizing the estrogen receptors in the pituitary gland, disrupting the negative feedback loop by estrogen towards the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis, ultimately resulting in an increase in gonadotropin secretion. In men with secondary hypogonadotropic hypogonadism, this improves ...

  5. Estriol (medication) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Estriol_(medication)

    Estriol is well-tolerated and produces relatively few adverse effects. Side effects may include breast tenderness, vaginal discomfort and discharge, and endometrial hyperplasia. Estriol is a naturally occurring and bioidentical estrogen, or an agonist of the estrogen receptor, the biological target of estrogens like endogenous estradiol.

  6. Gestodene - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gestodene

    Side effects of the combination of an estrogen and gestodene include menstrual irregularities, headaches, nausea, breast tenderness, mood changes, and others. [citation needed] Gestodene is a progestin, or a synthetic progestogen, and hence is an agonist of the progesterone receptor, the biological target of progestogens like progesterone.

  7. Halostachine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halostachine

    Halostachine (also known as N-methylphenylethanolamine) is a natural product, an alkaloid first isolated from the Asian shrub Halostachys caspica (synonym Halostachys belangeriana), and structurally a β-hydroxy-phenethylamine (a phenylethanolamine) related to its better-known "parent" biogenic amine, phenylethanolamine, to the adrenergic drug synephrine, and to the alkaloid ephedrine.

  8. Hydroxyzine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydroxyzine

    Hydroxyzine crosses the blood–brain barrier easily and exerts effects in the central nervous system. [46] A positron emission tomography (PET) study found that brain occupancy of the H 1 receptor was 67.6% for a single 30 mg dose of hydroxyzine. [52] In addition, subjective sleepiness correlated well with the brain H 1 receptor occupancy. [52]

  9. Lexapro: Everything You Need to Know About Its Side Effects - AOL

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    So Lexapro 20 mg side effects are the same as the side effects of 10 mg of Lexapro, but the 20 mg dose may have increased effects. But there’s no need for alarm.