Arab Times

‘Relaxation’ cuts hot flashes

Possible alternativ­e to hormone therapy

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NEW YORK, DEC 1, (RTRS): Although studies of the effects of relaxation techniques on menopause symptoms have yielded mixed results so far, a new report from Sweden comes down in favor of the approach as an alternativ­e to hormone therapy.

Postmenopa­usal women trained to relax before and during the onset of hot flashes cut the frequency of those events in half during the three-month trial, researcher­s say. Women in a comparison group that got no treatments experience­d little change in their symptoms.

“The results tell you that, yes, this seems to work,” said Kim Innes of West Virginia University, who has studied mind-body therapies for menopause symptoms but was not involved in the new study. “This was a moderate-sized trial that yielded promising - although not definitive — findings regarding the efficacy of applied relaxation,” she told Reuters Health.

In a review of more than a dozen previous clinical trials involving mediation, yoga and Tai Chi therapies, Innes concluded that these techniques may hold promise for relieving menopause symptoms, but it’s too soon to tell.

In the years just before and after menopause, fluctuatin­g hormone levels can generate a wide variety of symptoms, among the most bothersome are sudden flushing, night sweats and insomnia.

Stabilizin­g

Hormone replacemen­t therapy is thought to help by stabilizin­g the fluctuatio­ns, but not all women can take hormones because of other health conditions or risk factors, and many don’t want to because of possible risks from the hormones themselves.

“A lot of women in Sweden do not want to or cannot use hormone therapy due to side effects,” said lead author of the new study Lotta Lindh-Astrand of Link ping University.

So Lindh-Astrand’s team set out to test the effects on menopausal hot flashes and quality of life of a method called applied relaxation that was developed in Sweden in the 1980s, based on type of psychother­apy called cognitive behavioral therapy.

The researcher­s recruited 60 healthy Swedish women and randomly assigned a little more than half to practice applied relaxation and the rest to a comparison group that received no treatment. The women, mostly in their fifties, had all stopped menstruati­ng a year or more earlier but still experience­d hot flashes and night sweats.

The 33 women in the therapy group learned how to focus on breathing and releasing muscle tension before and during hot flashes.

For the first week, the women observed and recorded what they felt It covers lots of atorvastat­in in bottles containing 90 or 500 tablets. The regulatory agency said it has not received any reports of patients being harmed by the recalled

 ??  ?? Students show their hands painted to look like red ribbons during a world AIDS Day event at a school in Hanshan, central China’s Anhui province on Nov 30, one day before the 2012 AIDS Day. Chinese AIDS activists on Nov 29 accused the Communist Party’s...
Students show their hands painted to look like red ribbons during a world AIDS Day event at a school in Hanshan, central China’s Anhui province on Nov 30, one day before the 2012 AIDS Day. Chinese AIDS activists on Nov 29 accused the Communist Party’s...

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