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  2. As Susan Boulware, associate professor of clinical pediatrics and medical director for Yale School of Medicine's Gender Program, tells Yahoo Life, hormone therapy is a broad term used to describe ...

  3. Masculinizing hormone therapy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Masculinizing_hormone_therapy

    Estrogen is the predominant sex hormone that slows bone loss (even in men). Both estrogen and testosterone help stimulate bone formation (T, especially at puberty). Testosterone may cause an increase in cortical bone thickness in transgender men (however this does not necessarily translate to a greater mechanical stability).

  4. Here's Why Testosterone Is a Female Hormone, Too - AOL

    www.aol.com/heres-why-testosterone-female...

    One hundred percent of women will have low testosterone. There are zero products for that.” But you can still get testosterone from doctors—they’ll use a lower dose than in a male product.

  5. Estrogen (medication) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Estrogen_(medication)

    Conjugated estrogens (brand name Premarin), an estrogen product manufactured from the urine of pregnant mares and commonly used in menopausal hormone therapy, is a mixture of natural estrogens including estrone sulfate and equine estrogens such as equilin sulfate and 17β-dihydroequilin sulfate. [1]

  6. Feminizing hormone therapy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feminizing_hormone_therapy

    Firstly, if one is to decrease testosterone in feminizing gender transition, it is likely that sexual desire and arousal would be inhibited; alternatively, if high doses of estrogen negatively impact sexual desire, which has been found in some research with cisgender women, it is hypothesized that combining androgens with high levels of ...

  7. Hormone Therapy Was Villainized For Decades. Now, It ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/hormone-therapy-villainized-decades...

    In 2000, more than one in five women over 50 were taking hormones, according to statistics tracked by the Menopause Society, an influential health-care nonprofit. By 2008, fewer than 5 percent of ...

  8. Bioidentical hormone replacement therapy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bioidentical_hormone...

    Bioidentical hormones were first used for menopausal symptom relief in the 1930s, [2] after Canadian researcher James Collip developed a method to extract an orally active estrogen from the urine of pregnant women and marketed it as the active agent in a product called Emmenin. [3]

  9. Can 4 common medications — Viagra, estrogen, a statin ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/4-common-medications...

    This is the same as estrogen, and it’s used as a medication to manage and treat symptoms of menopause. Estradiol is the most common form of the estrogen hormone for hormone replacement therapy ...