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W
omen's Nutrition Detective
 


Natural Solutions To Your Hot Flashes

© Nan Kathryn Fuchs PhD

The following is one in an ongoing series of columns entitled Women's Nutrition Detective by Nan Kathryn Fuchs PhD.View all columns in series

Whether you'd rather drink a number of cups of sage tea every day for a while or try a product with sage, this herb may be the solution to your uncomfortable heat.

  • Vitamin E and Evening Primrose Oil may reduce hot flashes, but you might need to take as much as 1,200 IU of vitamin E each day. This is a lot, especially since vitamin E thins the blood —— not a good choice for someone on Coumadin or other blood thinner medications. Evening primrose oil, on the other hand, is quite safe in any quantity and is high in gamma-linolenic acid (GLA), an essential fatty acid. You may want to try one capsule twice a day and gradually increase it up to six or eight capsules a day until you get relief.

    Blumenthal, Mark. Herbal Medicine: Expanded Commission E Monographs, American Botanical Council, 2000.

    Gittleman, Ann Louise. Super Nutrition for Menopause, Avery Publishing, 1998.

    Hudson, Tori, ND. Women's Encyclopedia of Natural Medicine, Keats Publishing, 1999.

    PDR for Nutritional Supplements, Medical Economics Co., 2001.

    Robbers, James E., PhD, and Varro E. Tyler, PhD, ScD. Tyler's Herbs of Choice, The Haworth Herbal Press, 1999.

    Smith, C.J. "Non-hormonal control of vaso-motor flushing in menopausal patients," Chich Med, March 7, 1964.

    Stage, Sarah. Female Complaqints: Lydia Pinkham and the Business of Women's Medicine, W.W. Norton & Co., 1979.

    Werbach, Melvyn R., MD. Textbook of Nutritional Medicine, Third Line Press, 1999.

    Weed, Susun S. New Menopausal Years: The Wise Woman Way, Ash Tree Publishing, 2002.

    Liske, E., PhD, et al. "Physiological investigation of a unique extract of black cohosh (Cimicifugae racemosae rhizoma): A six-month clinical study demonstrates no systemic estrogenic effect," Journal of Women’s Health & Gender-Based Medicine, vol. 11, no. 2, 2002.

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    About The Author
    Nan Fuchs, Ph.D. is an authority on nutrition and the editor and writer of Women's Health Letter, the leading health advisory on nutritional healing for women. She is the author of the best-selling books, The Nutrition Detective: A Woman's Guide to Treating your Health Problems Through the Foods You Eat, Overcoming......more
     
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