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Yoga: The New Hot Flash Fix

Bothered by hot flashes and mood swings? Try a yoga class, suggests a new report in the journal Menopause.

In the study, 120 women ages 40 to 55 followed either a yoga routine (including breathing and meditative exercises) or a stretching and strengthening program for an hour at a time, five days a week, for eight weeks. The women in the yoga group also listened to lectures on diet and managing stress from a yogic point of view while those in the workout group attended talks on diet, exercise, menopause and coping with stress.

The yogis ended up experiencing fewer hot flashes and mood problems than the exercisers. And while both groups of women improved on tests of attention and concentration, the yoga group fared better.

Yoga helps because it reduces stress, speculates Timothy McCall, MD, author of Yoga as Medicine. The ancient postures are known to kick-start the parasympathetic nervous system, which is responsible for relaxation.

For possible relief from symptoms, the Yoga Alliance, an organization that maintains standards for yoga teachers, recommends these DVDs available on Amazon.com: Yoga for Stress Relief (with the Dalai Lama, buy it here) and Mayo Clinic Wellness Solutions for Menopause (buy it here).

Related stories:

Hormone-Free Treatments For Hot Flashes and Other Menopausal Symptoms

The Empowered Perimenopause Guide
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11.17.2009
Denise Maher
Thanks for your input. Did you get to read Dr Gerbstadt's story, Why I'm Trying HT? http://www.more.com/4488/8544‐women‐who‐need‐bioidentical‐hormone I'm curious to know if you, as a health care professional with personal experience with HT, can relate.
11.11.2009
55sheep Lum
Agree. I started yoga early this year and love it! However, hot yoga will probably never be my choice and the Climara patch saved my sanity. Everything helps. I held off HRT for so long but after much thought, research, and unbearable discomfort, I made the decision to start treatment. There's no secret fix. Its too bad that the media distorts so much of the researh about HRT and has scared women from considering hormone replacement therapy. It is hard to wade through the confusion for the lay public. I am much more confident about my choice but it helps that I am a nurse who has researched more reliable sources of information than the lay media .
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