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Ep. 596 “When Estrogen Drops, Your Gut Feels It” – How Hormones Slow Digestion in Midlife | Menopause, Perimenopause & Gut Health

Ep. 596 “When Estrogen Drops, Your Gut Feels It” – How Hormones Slow Digestion in Midlife | Menopause, Perimenopause & Gut Health

Published 2 days, 15 hours ago
Description

Welcome to today’s Midlife Minute.

Today, we’re exploring bloating, constipation, and various other midlife gut woes. 

Stay tuned as I clarify how midlife changes the gut narrative and review the evidence about how to get things moving again.

IN THIS EPISODE, YOU WILL LEARN:

  • Why your gut motility changes in midlife

  • How menopause influences the gut-brain connection

  • Why various types of constipation require different interventions

  • How changes in your gut bacteria affect the way your gut functions in menopause

  • How different types of fiber can either help or worsen constipation symptoms, depending on the type of constipation 

  • The main types of constipation, and how they differ 

  • How estrogen therapy may influence bowel regularity, and why the route of administration matters

  • Lifestyle habits that can stimulate bowel movements

  • Why bloating tends to occur in midlife

Connect with Cynthia Thurlow  

Links:

1. Menopause Is Associated with an Altered Gut Microbiome and Estrobolome, with Implications for Adverse Cardiometabolic Risk in the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos

2. The Intestinal Microbiome and Estrogen Receptor–Positive Female Breast Cancer 

3. Estrogen–gut microbiome axis: Physiological and clinical implications

4. Menopausal shift on women’s health and microbial niches

5. Gut microbiota has the potential to improve health of menopausal women by regulating estrogen

6. Gut-microbiota-targeted diets modulate human immune status

7. Effect of female sex hormone supplementation and withdrawal on gastrointestinal and colonic transit in postmenopausal women

8. Constipation and diarrhea during the menopause transition and early postmenopause: observations from the Seattle Midlife Women’s Health Study

9.

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