Hot Flushes Result of Estrogen Addiction
UBC Professor of Endocrinology Dr. Jerilynn C. Prior presents finding on estrogen addition and its treatment with progesterone at Women’s Health Congress 2010 in Washington DC
Vancouver, Canada (PRWEB) March 26, 2010 — A woman having a hot flush would fail a lie detector test. She may also be addicted to estrogen, according to Dr. Jerilynn C. Prior, author and Professor of Endocrinology at the University of British Columbia. Prior will be presenting on the idea of ‘estrogen addiction’ and its treatment with progesterone at the Women’s Health Congress, 2010 in Washington, DC, held March 26 to 28 at the Crystal Gateway Marriott.

Dr. JeriLynn Prior, UBC Professor of Endocrinology and Metabolism
The positive lie detector test isn’t because she’s not telling the truth, but because “she’s experiencing a massive release of brain chemicals that increases skin blood flow and changes her skin chemistry to produce a galvanic response, or positive lie detector test,” explains Prior. “Integrating what we know about hot flushes has led to the hypothesis that the brain exposed to prolonged high estrogen levels reacts like the brain of an addict without a fix when estrogen levels drop. The best animal model of hot flushes is the heroin-addicted mouse.”
The estrogen addiction idea fits with the reality that most estrogen-treated women who take it for hot flushes will experience an increased number and intensity of hot flushes and night sweats when they stop estrogen. Prior has found that progesterone helps women to gradually decrease and stop estrogen without a rebound increase in hot flushes (www.cemcor.ubc.ca “Stopping Estrogen”).
“The importance of the estrogen addiction idea is that it explains how progestins or progesterone work to effectively treat hot flushes,” says Prior. Estrogen and progesterone work together in every tissue of women’s bodies she writes in the book she co-authored with Susan Baxter, The Estrogen Errors–Why Progesterone is Better for Women’s Health.
A study in Neuropsychopharmacology (2004) shows that women are at greater risk for cocaine addiction than are men. “Estrogens increase the excitability of the brain and thus the risk for dependence or addiction. Progesterone, on the other hand, calms the brain and decreases anxiety,” says Prior. Extensive animal research and some early human studies show that progesterone decreases drug craving and lessens the psychological and physiological effects of cocaine’s “high.”
Jerilynn C. Prior, MD, FRCPC, ABIM, ABEM, is a Professor of Medicine, Endocrinology at the University of British Columbia (Vancouver, Canada). She is the founder and Scientific Director of the Centre for Menstrual Cycle and Ovulation Research (CeMCOR http://www.cemcor.ubc.ca/) and has published over 120 peer-reviewed scientific articles in medical journals including The New England Journal of Medicine and Lancet. Prior is invited as a Visiting Lecturer at institutions across Canada and the US (including the New York Academy of Sciences and Harvard School of Public Health) as well as internationally. She is author of the award-finalist book, Estrogen’s Storm Season–Stories of Perimenopause (CeMCOR, 2005, [reprinted 2007 Vancouver, Canada), and The Estrogen Errors–Why Progesterone is Better for Women’s Health.
For more information or to interview Dr Prior, please contact Lori Smithers: lori(dot)smithers(at)vch(dot)ca (Dr Prior’s assistant) 604-875-5927 or the Conference Media Center at 703-271-5181.
# # #
Tags: Estrogen, Addiction, Flushes, result


















































This is the biggest bunch of horse cr@@p Ive heard yet. The average woman in her 20\’s, menstruating on cycle at the peek of her hormonal output produces 450-750 pl (picoliter)of estrogen. At the time of menopause where estrogen is given, the highest measurement will be around 80-110 pls. One third of where women are regularly. Estrogen addiction is a ridiculous notion. To create a world of women walking round with more progesterone on board is a HORRIFIC notion. PMS and a lot of homicidal, suicidal women is what you will see. Hot Flushes/Flashes are a sign of Estrogen levels dropping and vasomotor responses to that. Women are often and regularly remedied of this issue with individual doses of estrogen adjusted to suit their needs. Not crazy hormonal concoctions, but pharmaceuticals that are bio-identical and safe to those who use them. Vivelle Dot for estrogen, Prometrium for progesterone use. Quality of life is the issue at menopause and peri menopause. Stop trying to confuse these women and sell a theory that is preposterous. They need real answers and real solutions for real women who are suffering. Dr. John Arpels, menopausal gynecologist/endocrinologist helped me and I know from the results alone, he knows menopausal women like no other.
Do you currently have any dealings with operations and see patients or, are you primarily a professor at UBC? I think you’d be the perfect person to address pituitary concerns that address over production of prolactin and cushings syndrome. I’m looking for a quality professional in order to see to positive resolution.
Faith 604-564-2679 Do you have a phone number in which I could reach you personally?