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Fibrocystic Breast Disease
Breast Cancer
Osteoporosis
Menopause
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Miscarriage

Miscarriage

Excerpts from a talk with John. R. Lee, M.D.
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Miscarriage

Progesterone is the progestation hormone. It keeps the bloody lining intact as a rich natural health food restaurant open 24 hours a day for the fertilized egg when it lands there and begins to multiply. This very tiny living being has to have a constant food supply, and as there is yet no placenta or umbilical cord to supply nutrients, the bloody lining is the baby's first food supply. Also the baby always has a different DNA than the mother, and the body's natural defense system always tries to reject nonself. The only thing known to biology that is capable of turning off this defense system in relation to the baby's different DNA is progesterone. Without progesterone the bloody lining is shed and the pregnancy is terminated. Many women who have experienced multiple miscarriages find that they can carry their babies to term by using natural progesterone. Dr. Lee has received hundreds of phone calls and letters telling him that they are so grateful to finally have a baby that they have named their baby after him when it was a boy.

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Osteoporosis

Osteoporosis is often caused by a lack of progesterone. Very rarely is it a lack of calcium. New bone is formed by osteoblasts, and old bone is removed by osteoclasts. When the osteoclast activity goes faster than the osteoblast activity bone loss occurs. Progesterone is the key factor in osteoblast or building of new bone. Dr. John R. Lee checked this out with 63 women over a 3 year period, doing bone mineral density tests every six months. At the end of a 3 year test on these women using progesterone cream, the average increase in bone density was 15.4%. These were all postmenopausal women who would normally expect to have a 1.5% bone loss per year, or a total bone loss for 3 years of 4.5%. There was a 19.9% difference between the expected loss and the real increase that occurred. This is very exciting, as medicine has been saying that you can't reverse osteoporosis; you can only slow it down. Estrogen does not reverse it. It only slows down bone loss for the two to three years of menopause, then has no further effect.

Dr. Lee tells of a woman 72 years old who had over 40% bone loss and was in pain because of a stress facture in her lower spine. In spite of opposition from 5 doctors involved in her case, she decided to follow Dr. Lee's advice, and in only 16 months experienced a 23% increase in her bone density. All but one of the doctors wrote Dr. Lee, telling him that they would not have believed it had they not seen it with their own eyes. This lady is now 80 years old, and is continuing to use the progesterone cream. Her total increase in bone density is up 38%. When Dr. Lee was asked how long she should continue using it, he responded: "Keep using it until you are 95, and then we'll reevaluate."

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Fibrocystic Breast Disease

Fibrocystic breast disease is affecting a very high percentage of women. One of the major causes of this is too much estrogen. In an article in Fertility and Sterility, published by the 1995 American Society for Reproductive Medicine, a double blind study on the use of progesterone cream studying cellular proliferation, showed a 410% decrease in cellular proliferation in only 13 days. Estrogen applied topically caused an increase of cellular proliferation of 223% in the same period of time. Since many women and doctors alike believe fibrocystic breast disease a prelude to breast cancer, a number of women are having mastectomies for fibrocystic breasts.

Dr. Lee indicates that in hundreds of cases in his medical practice he never saw a case of fibrocystic breast disease fail to completely disappear within three months. We recently saw a case in Las Vegas with a women who had over 200 fibrocysts the doctor quit counting at 200 and recommended a mastectomy. Instead she went on the progesterone cream, and 64 days later, feeling much better, went back to see her doctor. All the fibrocysts were gone, and this doctor couldn't understand it, and refused to even consider that a transdermal progesterone cream could be the cause of this disappearance of the problem.

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