Progesterone in Menopause: Separating Internet Controversy from Clinical Science

Progesterone’s Role Goes Beyond Pregnancy

Progesterone isn’t just a “pregnancy hormone”—it helps support bone health, mood, sleep, and protects the uterus. Starting in your late 30s, progesterone begins declining before other hormones, setting the stage for many perimenopausal symptoms.

 

Understanding Progesterone: Myths, Science, and Health Impacts
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Not All Progesterones Are the Same

A key message from Dr. Betty Murray: bioidentical micronized progesterone (which is identical to what your body makes) is not the same as the synthetic progestins used in some birth control and older hormone therapies. Synthetic forms carry increased risks for blood clots and cancers, while bioidentical progesterone is safer and may even offer protection.


Benefits for Sleep, Mood, and Hot Flashes

Many women struggle with poor sleep and hot flashes during menopause. Oral micronized progesterone (usually 300mg at bedtime) can improve sleep quality and reduce night sweats and hot flashes—benefits that are backed by clinical studies. While most women do well, individual metabolism means some may experience mood changes or anxiety instead.


Routes, Dosage, and Individualization Matter

How you take progesterone matters. Oral forms support sleep and vasomotor symptoms but can occasionally cause side effects. In women who react poorly, vaginal progesterone is a good alternative for uterine protection but less effective for sleep and hot flashes. Not all women need the same dose—your history and genetics play a role.


Cyclic vs. Continuous: What’s Right?

There’s little evidence that postmenopausal women need to “cycle” progesterone to mimic their premenopausal periods. Continuous dosing is safe, effective, and simpler for most women.


Ignore the Hype, Focus on Human Research

Scary stories about progesterone and brain health come from animal studies or from confusion with synthetic hormones. Human studies on bioidentical progesterone are reassuring—showing no cognitive harm, and often improved sleep and mood.


Key Takeaways

  • Bioidentical progesterone is safe, evidence-based, and often protective.
  • Choose your form and dose based on YOUR symptoms and needs.
  • Ignore online myths rooted in studies on animals or synthetic progestins.
  • Demand a personalized approach from your healthcare provider.

Menopause is unique to every woman—so should your hormone therapy be.

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