October 2, 2007
Hysterectomy Can Change The Way Your Brain Works
After you’ve had your hysterectomy, sooner or later you count on severe hormonal disturbances. If they took your ovaries out as well, then it will be a surgical menopause, and even if the ovaries are left in, they start degrading in function after a year or two. Progesterone has direct influence on the brain, and estrogen makes the walls of your arteries and veins more flexible. If you do not have these hormones, the brain will suffer. Many women will have certain loss of memory, or will not be able to choose the right word on the spot, after a hysterectomy.
In this blog entry, When You Just Ain’t Right, on the blog called RealMental, author Bellinda enumerates the many troubles she’s been through, and one of which was having a hysterectomy. Here is what she thinks of the hormones part:
“And then there’s the hormone angle, which I don’t even know for sure how to approach. Something has GOT to be going on there, since the weirdness has escalated by, um, a bunch, since my hysterectomy last fall. When I first came out of surgery, on estrogen deprivation, I literally felt, for the first and only time in my life, that I had lost my mind. It’s like nothing I can describe–the misery, despair, agony, anxiety–the certainty that it’s never going to be better, ever. After a couple of weeks, I was able to start estrogen replacement therapy, and it was like a miracle…at least to a point. It made the extreme crazy go away, but like I said at the beginning of this post, I still ain’t quite right. But then, I’ve never had the dosage checked or adjusted, so there’s a thought…”
This is exactly why we here, at this blog How To Avoid Hysterectomy, advise women not to have hysterectomy unless they absolutely have to. A woman’s body is a finely tuned mechanism and any prolonged emotional disturbance will reflect as a gynecological disorder. This is precisely why taking Lupron and other medications leads to hysterectomy — they just cover up the symptoms, never do they charge upon the real cause of the disorder. For emotional disturbances take remedies such Bach flower remedies, eventually clean up the mess using either the conventional or alternative medicine and you’ll start seeing the light at the end of the tunnel.
Filed under Energy Healing, Flower Remedies, Hormones, Hysterectomy, Lupron, Menopause by Dusko Savic
August 5, 2007
Who Should Visit the Site How To AvoidHysterectomy.com?
First and foremost, this is for women who are threatened by the word hysterectomy and what it really means. 80% of all hysterectomies can be avoided, provided there is time and will. (I can tell you whether is there time, through a medical astrology reading, but you must supply your own will to avoid it.)
All astrologers should come and see the readings of the charts, and students of medical astrology should certainly bookmark the site to come and read all of it!
Students and practitioners of various energy healing techniques, such as Reiki, homeopathy, Su Jok, herbal and flower remedies and so on, should also come to How To Avoid Hysterectomy.com to see how their methods blend in with periods of time that were read through the horoscope.
Of course, all others interested in hysterectomy in particular and in gynecology at large should feel free to subscribe to the RSS feed!
Filed under Astrology, Contact Info, Dowsing, Endometriosis, Energy Healing, Herbal Remedies, Homeopathy, Hormones, Hysterectomy, Hysterectomy video, Laparoscopy, Laparotomy, Medical Astrology, Menopause, Myomectomy, Novasure, Reiki, Uncategorized, Uterine Fibroids, Uterus, Video, Website Policies by Dusko Savic
July 12, 2007
Hysteroscopic Myomectomy
Hysteroscopic myomectomy, also called hysteroscopic resection, can be a myomectomy method of choice if the fibroids are all (intracavitary) or for the most part (submucosal) on the inner wall of the uterus. The instrument used is called the resectoscope, and it is a special kind of hysteroscope. Hysteroscope goes through the cervix and there is no need for an incision at all in this method. Hysteroscope is a tiny camera, and the resectoscope part is a wire loop, which removes the fibroid. If the fibroid is particularly large, two procedures may be needed.
Sometimes, the surgeon will prescribe Gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) agonists, such as Depot Lupron, to be taken a month or two in advance. That will shrink the fibroids while being taken. The downside of using Lupron is a temporary menopause, with symptoms such as hot flashes, sweating and the like.
Click here to read the entire article on hysteroscopic myomectomy.
Filed under Hysterectomy, Hysterectomy video, Menopause, Myomectomy, Uterine Fibroids, Uterus by Dusko Savic




































