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- <head><title>Progesterone Pregnenolone & DHEA - Three Youth-Associated Hormones</title></head>
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- <h1>
- Progesterone Pregnenolone & DHEA - Three Youth-Associated Hormones
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- <p>
- <strong>PROGESTERONE INFORMATION</strong>
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- <p>
- Raymond Peat, MA, PhD (Univ. of Oregon)
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- Endocrine Physiologist, specializing in hormonal changes in stress and aging
- </p>
- <p>
- Sixty years ago, progesterone was found to be the main hormone produced by the ovaries. Since it was
- necessary for fertility and for maintaining a healthy pregnancy, it was called the "pro-gestational
- hormone," and its name sometimes leads people to think that it isn't needed when you don't want to get
- pregnant. In fact, it is the most protective hormone the body produces, and the large amounts that are
- produced during pregnancy result from the developing baby's need for protection from the stressful
- environment. Normally, the brain contains a very high concentration of progesterone, reflecting its
- protective function for that most important organ. The thymus gland, the key organ of our immune system, is
- also profoundly dependent on progesterone.
- </p>
- <p>
- In experiments, progesterone was found to be the basic hormone of adaptation and of resistance to stress.
- The adrenal glands use it to produce their anti-stress hormones, and when there is enough progesterone, they
- don't have to produce the potentially harmful cortisone. In a progesterone deficiency, we produce too much
- cortisone, and excessive cortisone causes osteoporosis, aging of the skin, damage to brain cells, and the
- accumulation of fat, especially on the back and abdomen.
- </p>
- <p>
- Experiments have shown that progesterone relieves anxiety, improves memory, protects brain cells, and even
- prevents epileptic seizures. It promotes respiration, and has been used to correct emphysema. In the
- circulatory system, it prevents bulging veins by increasing the tone of blood vessels, and improves the
- efficiency of the heart. It reverses many of the signs of aging in the skin, and promotes healthy bone
- growth. It can relieve many types of arthritis, and helps a variety of immunological problems.
- </p>
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- If progesterone is taken dissolved in vitamin E, it is absorbed very efficiently, and distributed quickly to
- all of the tissues. If a woman has ovaries, progesterone helps them to produce both progesterone and
- estrogen as needed, and also helps to restore normal functioning of the thyroid and other glands. If her
- ovaries have been removed, progesterone should be taken consistently to replace the lost supply. A
- progesterone deficiency has often been associated with increased susceptibility to cancer, and progesterone
- has been used to treat some types of cancer.
- </p>
- <p>
- It is important to emphasize that progesterone is not just the hormone of pregnancy. To use it only "to
- protect the uterus" would be like telling a man he doesn't need testosterone if he doesn't plan to father
- children, except that progesterone is of far greater and more basic significance than testosterone. While
- men do naturally produce progesterone, and can sometimes benefit from using it, it is not a male hormone.
- Some people get that impression, because some physicians recommend combining estrogen with either
- testosterone or progesterone, to protect against some of estrogen's side effects, but progesterone is the
- body's natural complement to estrogen. Used alone, progesterone often makes it unnecessary to use estrogen
- for hot flashes or insomnia, or other symptoms of menopause.
- </p>
- <p>
- When dissolved in vitamin E, progesterone begins entering the blood stream almost as soon as it contacts any
- membrane, such as the lips, tongue, gums, or palate, but when it is swallowed, it continues to be absorbed
- as part of the digestive process. When taken with food, its absorption occurs at the same rate as the
- digestion and absorption of the food.
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong>PREGNENOLONE</strong>
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- <p>
- Pregnenolone, which is the raw material for producing many of the hormones of stress and adaptation, was
- known as early as 1934, but for several years it was considered to be an "inert" substance. A reason for
- this belief is that it was first tested on healthy young animals. Since these animals were already producing
- large amounts of pregnenolone (in the brain, adrenal glands, and gonads), additional pregnenolone had no
- effect.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- In the 1940s, pregnenolone was tested in people who were sick or under stress, and it was found to have a
- wide range of beneficial actions, but the drug industry never had much interest in it. Its very generality
- made it seem unlike a drug, and its natural occurrence made it impossible to patent. Thus, many synthetic
- variants, each with a more specialized action and some serious side effects, came to be patented and
- promoted for use in treating specific conditions. The drug companies created an atmosphere in which many
- people felt that each disease should have a drug, and each drug, a disease. The side effects of some of
- those synthetic hormones were so awful that many people came to fear them. For example, synthetic varieties
- of "cortisone" can destroy immunity, and can cause osteoporosis, diabetes, and rapid aging, with loss of
- pigment in the skin and hair, and extreme thinning of the skin.
- </p>
- <p>
- Natural pregnenolone is present in young people of both sexes at a very high concentration, and one reason
- for the large amount produced in youth is that it is one of our basic defenses against the harmful side
- effects that an imbalance of even our natural hormones can produce. In excess, natural cortisone or estrogen
- can be dangerous, but when there is an abundance of pregnenolone, their side effects are prevented or
- minimized.
- </p>
- <p>
- In a healthy young person or animal, taking even a large dose of pregnenolone has no hormone-like or
- drug-like action at all. It is unique in this way. But if the animal or person is under stress, and
- producing more cortisone than usual, taking pregnenolone causes the cortisone to come down to the normal
- level. After the age of 40 or 45, it seems that everyone lives in a state of continuous "stress," just as a
- normal part of aging. This coincides with the body's decreased ability to produce an abundance of
- pregnenolone.
- </p>
- <p>
- When aging rats are given a supplement of pregnenolone, it immediately improves their memory and general
- performance. Human studies, as early as the 1940s, have also demonstrated improved performance of ordinary
- tasks. It is now known that pregnenolone is one of the major hormones in the brain. It is produced by
- certain brain cells, as well as being absorbed into the brain from the blood. It protects brain cells from
- injury caused by fatigue, and an adequate amount has a calming effect on the emotions, which is part of the
- reason that it protects us from the stress response that leads to an excessive production of cortisone.
- People feel a mood of resilience and an ability to confront challenges.
- </p>
- <p>
- Many people have noticed that pregnenolone has a "face-lifting" action. This effect seems to be produced by
- improved circulation to the skin, and by an actual contraction of some muscle-like cells in the skin. A
- similar effect can improve joint mobility in arthritis, tissue elasticity in the lungs, and even eyesight.
- Many studies have shown it to be protective of "fibrous tissues" in general, and in this connection it was
- proven to prevent the tumors that can be caused by estrogen.
- </p>
- <p>
- Pregnenolone is largely converted into two other "youth-associated" protective hormones, progesterone and
- DHEA. At the age of 30, both men and women produce roughly 30 to 50 mg. of pregnenolone daily. When taken
- orally, even in the powdered form, it is absorbed fairly well. One dose of approximately 300 mg (the size of
- an aspirin tablet) keeps acting for about a week, as absorption continues along the intestine, and as it is
- "recycled" in the body. Part of this long lasting effect is because it improves the body's ability to
- produce its own pregnenolone. It tends to improve function of the thyroid and other glands, and this
- "normalizing" effect on the other glands helps to account for its wide range of beneficial effects.
- </p>
- <p><strong>DHEA: ANOTHER YOUTH-ASSOCIATED HORMONE</strong></p>
- <p>
- Raymond Peat, MA, PhD (Univ. of Oregon)
- </p>
- <p>
- Endocrine Physiologist
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- <p>
- DHEA (dehydroepiandrosterone) has a technical-sounding name because it has never been identified with a
- single dominant function, in spite of its abundance in the body. Many researchers still think of it as a
- substance produced by the adrenal glands, but experiments show that animals without adrenals are able to
- produce it in normal amounts. Much of it is formed in the brain (from pregnenolone), but it is probably
- produced in other organs, including the skin. The brain contains a much higher concentration of DHEA than
- the blood does.
- </p>
- <p>
- In old age, we produce only about 5% as much as we do in youth. This is about the same decrease that occurs
- with progesterone and pregnenolone. The other hormones (for example, cortisone) do not decrease so much; as
- a result, our balance shifts continually during aging toward dominance by hormones such as cortisone, which
- use up more and more body substance, without rebuilding it. Protection against the toxic actions of these
- specialized hormones is a major function of DHEA and the other youth-associated hormones.
- </p>
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- <p>
- For example, starvation, aging, and stress cause the skin to become thin and fragile. An excess of
- cortisone--whether it is from medical treatment, or from stress, aging, or malnutrition--does the same
- thing. Material from the skin is dissolved to provide nutrition for the more essential organs. Other organs,
- such as the muscles and bones, dissolve more slowly, but just as destructively, under the continued
- influence of cortisone. DHEA blocks these destructive effects of cortisone, and actively restores the normal
- growth and repair processes to those organs, strengthening the skin and bones and other organs. Stimulation
- of bone-growth by DHEA has been demonstrated in vitro (in laboratory tests), and it has been used to relieve
- many symptoms caused by osteoporosis and arthritis, even when applied topically in an oily solution.
- </p>
- <p>
- Estrogen is known to produce a great variety of immunological defects, and DHEA, apparently by its balancing
- and restorative actions, is able to correct some of those immunological defects, including some "autoimmune"
- diseases.
- </p>
- <p>
- It is established that DHEA protects against cancer, but it isn't yet understood how it does this. It
- appears to protect against the toxic cancer-producing effects of excess estrogen, but its anti-cancer
- properties probably involve many other functions.
- </p>
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- Diabetes can be produced experimentally by certain poisons which kill the insulin-producing cells in the
- pancreas. Rabbits were experimentally made diabetic, and when treated with DHEA their diabetes was cured. It
- was found that the insulin-producing cells had regenerated. Many people with diabetes have used brewer's
- yeast and DHEA to improve their sugar metabolism. In diabetes, very little sugar enters the cells, so
- fatigue is a problem. DHEA stimulates cells to absorb sugar and to burn it, so it increases our general
- energy level and helps to prevent obesity.
- </p>
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- Young people produce about 12 to 15 milligrams of DHEA per day, and that amount decreases by about 2 mg. per
- day for every decade after the age of 30. This is one of the reasons that young people eat more without
- getting fat, and tolerate cold weather better: DHEA, like the thyroid hormone, increases our heat production
- and ability to burn calories. At the age of 50, about 4 mg. of DHEA per day will usually restore the level
- of DHEA in the blood to a youthful level. It is important to avoid taking more than needed, since some
- people (especially if they are deficient in progesterone, pregnenolone, or thyroid) can turn the excess into
- estrogen or testosterone, and large amounts of those sex hormones can disturb the function of the thymus
- gland and the liver.
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- People who have taken an excess of DHEA have been found to have abnormally high estrogen levels, and this
- can cause the liver to enlarge, and the thymus to shrink.
- </p>
- <p>
- One study has found that the only hormone abnormality in a groupt of Alzheimers patients' brains was an
- excess of DHEA. In cell culture, DHEA can cause changes in glial cells resembling those seen in the aging
- brain. These observations suggest that DHEA should be used with caution. Supplements of pregnenolone and
- thyroid seem to be the safest way to optimize DHEA production.
- </p>
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- © Ray Peat 2006. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com
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