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Weight Loss Products for Menopause, Estrin D

by Ricardo d Argence

Menopause may be a natural stage in a woman’s life but the accompanying weight gain has all women worried. Weight gain is not just bad for cosmetic reasons but also unhealthy too.

Recent studies have shown that the risk of developing high blood pressure increases by a minimum of 5% for each two pound increase in weight. When the estrogen levels decrease it also causes the body’s metabolism to slow down, causing the body to cling tightly to its fat resources.

This weight gain also is responsible for other health problems as well. Heart diseases, diabetes and even an increased risk of cancer of the breast and other kinds have been attributed to this menopausal weight gain.

Pharmacetical companies has developed certain menopausal weight loss products that claim to ease the weight problems of women. Menopause brings an increase in appetite and a slower metabolism, which many of the popular weight loss programs claim to balance. They say to support females in coping with issues of menopause and help them with nutrients.

A new product for menopausal weight loss is Estrin D. It claims to have ingredients like caffeine, guarana, yerba, matte and herbal constituents like damiana, ginger, schisandra and Tibetan ginseng. The ingredients assist in controlling appetite, as well as stimulate metabolism and decrease chance of mood swings, which can change because of changes in hormone levels. They are all known to increase the basal metabolic rate in a person. The caffeine present in the product is a natural stimulant as well. But, can this be used by women undergoing menopause is the question that arises.

Medical research tells us that caffeine during menopause is not such a good idea. Caffeine in normal circumstances can cause an increase in the heart rate, increase blood pressure, sweating. It’s seen that women experiencing menopause can experience some ill effects if they take caffeine. The classic menopausal symptoms like hot flashes, insomnia and night sweats may become more pronounced by consuming caffeine. Caffeine consumption can also cause osteoporosis in women during menopause.

User reviews indicate that the product contains high levels of stimulants, and this is not something that women who are experiencing menopause should be exposed to. These stimulants may cause nausea, anxiety and jitters in women. Besides, stimulants do not guarantee sustained weight loss. There also appear to be no appetite suppressants in it’s formula. Caffeine will not produce any significant fat loss when compared to a patented fat burner. Despite how much it costs, there is no guarantee of getting your money back.

Instead of investing in expensive supplements to control the health issues associated with menopause, women can benefit from a healthy diet and moderate exercise. These supplements do more harm than good due to such a high amount of stimulants. You only need to reduce the fat and fried foods in your diet as well as regularly exercising.

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7 Comments to “Weight Loss Products for Menopause, Estrin D”

  1. on 30 Mar 2009 at 7:23 pmMatthias Heil

    Are you interested in having an edge in your next athletic competition?  If so, you likely have tried many different supplements, with differing effects.  Many so-called supplements are actually banned substances that can do irreparable harm to your …

  2. on 31 Mar 2009 at 12:42 pmNDSUNews

    After producing the AM show, the Wellness Fair that’s offering free massages sounds like a good idea. It’s at 9am at Central Texas College.

  3. on 03 Apr 2009 at 12:55 amI'M ON A DIET!!!!!

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  4. on 04 Apr 2009 at 1:39 pmJe t'aime ♥

    Like most trans people, my given name had to go. I had issues with it beyond the male inference, a name culled from Hebrew meaning "Yahweh is God" always seemed like a terribly inappropriate moniker for an atheist, though if I had been cis I doubt I would have gone to any lengths to modify it.

    Choosing my female name was something of a trial, though. My mother told me that Emily was the name she had expected to bestow upon the child she assumed to be cis female until birth, and I was planning to adopt that name until she requested me not to do so a few months after I initiated my transition. I had accepted that as my name but saw naming me as her parental right and decided that any name I chose required her consent and approval. Now I am kind of thankful she did because my social/peer groups are never in want of an Emily, and in one case I would’ve been one of the only two females in a film production class and both with the name Emily.

    I had no desire to choose the feminine variant of my given name, as I thought it to be a rather awkward name that carried the same problematic theological elements as my given name in addition to being in my opinion too slight a variation to be satisfactory and also somewhat unflattering. For a while I considered naming myself Linna, after the aerobics instructor/knight saber from Bubble Gum Crisis, but dismissed that name because I could find no real history for it and felt that I would likely regret choosing the name of an anime character 10, 20 years from now.

    Then I landed on Jill, a slighter variation of my given name than its feminine variant but one that seems to fit me perfectly. It’s short and I find it to be feminine yet not infantilizing nor disempowering. I feel it carries with it a certain casual plainness that I find modest and respectable but also to allow a dimension of cute and fun. Jillian may be more eloquent but I find Jill to be more practical. It fits as well on an academic essay as it does on a diary entry or a love letter. It helped my friends and family members adjust more easily to the name change by being phonologically similar to my given name, yet is not evidence of my history in itself to those who are not aware of it. I feel honored to be part of the historical and fictional heritage of the name, with figures such as the wonderful Mr. Show writer/performer Jill Talley, Patricia Richardson’s thoughtful portrayal of Jill Taylor on Home Improvement, and Resident Evil’s Jill Valentine, the ever resourceful "master of unlocking".

    I went through a lot to get my name, at the cost of 20 years and about $300, and I wouldn’t give up Jill for anything.

  5. on 06 Apr 2009 at 9:09 amBerthashop123

    The Once Curvy Actress Is Half The Woman She Used To Be… …
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  6. on 06 Apr 2009 at 3:41 pmVickyPearce

    We are taking our Toyota Highlander Hybrid on our first long journey soon. I’m hoping the battery holds out. Sorry to hear about your trouble. :(

  7. on 07 Apr 2009 at 10:30 pmfv sexy

    Are menopause and hair loss related. My mother is losing hair at a dangerous pace. Houston is known for hair fall, but the pace at which she is losing hair is unbelievable. I have been wanting to take her to a specialist. Meanwhile, has anyone here witnessed it ? She is 45 now. Any…

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