Area doctor to launch book on women’s health during menopause – Southgate News Herald

For decades, doctors have assumed that symptoms of menopause, such as hot flashes, sweating and reduced sex drive, are caused by a reduction in the amount of estrogen that the body is producing. Dr. Charles Mok, a former emergency room physician who is board certified in Anti-Aging Medicine and the founder of Allure Medical Spa and Allure Vein Center of Southgate, has evidence that doctors have focused too much on estrogen for menopause and science has found low testosterone levels are also responsible for many symptoms. In his new book Testosterone: Strong Enough for a Man, Made for a Woman (Forbes Hardcover $25.99, ISBN 978-0998365503), Dr. Mok provides peer-reviewed studies which support this view, translating scientific literature into an easy to understand manual for hormone replacement therapy. The book launch is scheduled for March 2 at a Macomb County Allure Medical Spa location.

The evidence for testosterone therapy is overwhelming, and we want to get the message to doctors and, importantly, to their patients, says Dr. Mok. Clinical research shows that testosterone reduces the risk of breast cancer by 50 to 75 percent, which has enormous health implications, and natural estrogen cuts the risk of heart attacks by over 70 percent if used long term. For women suffering from debilitating symptoms such as mood swings, anxiety, hot flashes and reduced libido, the treatment can really improve overall quality of life.

Dr. Moks book takes readers on a journey that chronicles the start of hormone replacement therapy in the 1940s through to the flawed 2002 Womens Health Initiative which suggested women taking a combination of synthetic estrogen drugs and synthetic progesterone had an increased risk of heart disease and breast cancer, which ultimately dissuaded millions of women from seeking hormonal help. It is important to note that further research into the Womens Health Initiative data showed that when women took even the synthetic hormones around the time of menopause and stayed on them, there was a 40 percent reduction in their risk heart attacks and premature mortality.

Dr. Moks book provides compelling evidence about the important role of testosterone in shaping womens health. The hormone is 10-20 times more abundant than estrogen in young women, but then falls as women age. Dr. Mok provides myriad long term studies showing that modern testosterone therapy (normally delivered in the form of a tiny pellet, about the size of a grain of rice, inserted underneath the skin) keeps women healthier, with no adverse side-effects.

Benefits can include weight loss, better sex life, improved mood, fewer sleep problems, reduced hot flashes and night sweats, thicker hair, lower risk of breast cancer and lower risk of heart disease.

Dr. Mok became interested in preventive medicine while working as an emergency room doctor, recognizing that many of his patients conditions could have been avoided. His medical career has now taken him on a path to help patients live their best lives, and for many this approach has been life-changing.

Dr. Mok will launch his book with a lecture, followed by a party, at 6 p.m. March 2 at Allure Medical Spa, 8180 26 Mile Road, Shelby Township.

The event is free to the public and all attendees will receive a copy of the book. RSVP by calling 586-992-8300 or emailing info@alluremedicalspa.com.

Source: CKC Agency

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Area doctor to launch book on women's health during menopause - Southgate News Herald

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