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PROSTATE
PROBLEMS AND HORMONES:
Male Prostate, Estrogen dominance and Progesterone benefits by John R.
Lee, MD - a Harvard-trained physician and leading medical authority on
natural progesterone, Medical News Letter January 1999.
Some
years back, a handful of men called or wrote to tell me of their experience
with progesterone, usually the result of handling progesterone cream while
helping a woman apply it. They reported that their symptoms of prostate
enlargement or benign prostatic hypertrophy (3PK) such as urinary urgency
and frequency decreased considerably, and their sexual performance increased,
Needless to say, this gave me much to think about. Since then, several
men with prostate cancer have told me their PSA (Prostate Specific Antigen)
level - an indication of prostate cancer - decreased when they started
using a daily dab of progesterone cream, and that they have had no progression
of their prostate lesions since using the cream. One man called to say
his bone metastases are now no longer visible by Mayo clinic X-ray tests.
Though I retired from active practice ten years ago, six of my former
patients with early prostate cancer have been using progesterone cream
(along with diet, some vitamin and mineral supplements, and saw palmetto)
for about five years. All report their cancer has shown no progression.
The
Wrong Treatment All These Years
Since
Huggins showed, in 1941, that castration (removal of the testicles) slowed
progression of prostate cancer, physicians have assumed it was the resulting
lack of testosterone that slowed the cancer, and ever since have relied
on suppression of testosterone in their treatment of the disease. However,
the testosterone suppression benefit only lasts two to three years, and
then the prostate cancer progresses to an androgen (male hormone) insensitive
state and continues to spread. Despite this, metastatic prostate cancer
patients are treated with androgen blockade through castration (orchiectomy)
and/or hormone-suppressing drugs I remember reading studies done 30 to
40 years ago showing that testosterone supplementation prevented survival
of prostate cancer cells transplanted to test mammals. In more recent
(as yet unpublished) studies it has been shown that in a prostate cancer
cell culture, testosterone kills the cancer cells. A 1996 study published
in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences showed that in
mice, testosterone will shrink human prostate tumors. The benefit of castration
in prostate cancer stemmed from estradiol reduction, not testosterone
reduction
Tracking
the Culprit
Why does prostate cancer occur so often in aging men? Consider the changes
in testicular hormone production as men age:
1. Testosterone levels fall;
2. More testosterone is changed (by 5-alpha-reductase enzyme) to dihydrotestosterone
(DHT), stimulating prostate growth;
3. Progesterone levels fall. Progesterone is vital to good health in men.
It is the primary precursor of our adrenal cortical hormones and testosterone.
Men synthesize progesterone in smaller amounts than women do but it is
still vital. Since progesterone Is a potent inhibitor of 5-alpha-reductase,
the decline of progesterone in aging males plays a role in increasing
the conversion rate of testosterone to DHT.
4. Estradiol (an estrogen) effect increases. Testosterone Is a direct
antagonist of estradiol. Both the fall in testosterone and the shift from
testosterone to DHT allows increased effect of estradiol. Male estradiol
levels are equivalent to or greater than that of postmenopausal females,
but normally estradiol's effects are suppressed (antagonized) by the male's
greater production of testosterone. Perhaps estradiol Is also the culprit
(along with DHT) in prostate growth.
Getting
Down to the Gene Level
Embryology teaches us that the prostate Is the male equivalent of the
female uterus. The two organs differentiate from the same embryonic cells
and they share many of the same genes such as the oncogene, Bcl-2, and
the cancer-protector gene, p53. It is not surprising then, that the hormonal
relationships in endometrial cancer will be the same in prostate cancer;
that is both are very sensitive to the harmful effects of unopposed estrogen
and are protected by progesterone. Researchers T.S. Wiley and Bent Formby,
Ph.D. have done test tube studies that verify this relationship, but human
studies still need to be done. The course of prostate cancer growth, like
breast cancer growth [is] due to the continued presence of an underlying
metabolic imbalance. The underlying metabolic imbalance in all hormone-dependent
cancers is estrogen dominance. Prevent the estrogen dominance and you
will prevent the cancer. If the cancer is already underway, correcting
the estrogen dominance will slow the cancer growth and prolong life. The
benefit of castration in prostate cancer stemmed from estradiol reduction,
not testosterone reduction. Given the choice, I would choose testosterone
and progesterone supplementation...."
Dr.
Lee's Healthy Prostate Program
1. Diet should avoid sugars, refined starches, and other glycemic (insulin-raising)
foods as well as high. estrogen food such as feedlot-raised meat and milk.
2. Avoid xenoestrogens such as pesticides and some plastics
3. Maintain a good intake of antioxidants.
4. If you are over 50, monitor saliva hormone levels of progesterone and
testosterone.
5. Supplement progesterone and testosterone by transdermal cream to maintain
saliva levels consistent with that of healthy mature males. When supplemented
in this manner: I recommend 8 to 10 mg per day of progesterone and 1~2
mg per day of testosterone.
6. From my clinical experience, It would not surprise me that exercise
and an active sex life are also protective factors against prostate cancer.
7. It is known that chronic inflammation may also be potentially carcinogenic.
It is wise, therefore, to maintain one's intake of antioxidants such as
vitamin C, selenium, and the fat soluble anti-oxidant vitamins, A, E,
D, and K.
John R. Lee, MD - Medical News Letter January 1999
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