Daily Mail

Menopause shake that claims to banish your hormonal blues

...created by a woman who used it to cure her own

- By Victoria Woodhall Peri-Boost costs £69 for a 30-day supply, mpowder.store.

DURInG their 16 years of marriage, dinner with her husband on Valentine’s Day had always been an immovable fixture in Rebekah Brown’s diary.

however busy their life with three teenage children, full-time jobs and ageing parents became, this one date night was sacrosanct. But in 2019, Rebekah, then 46, a successful advertisin­g planner, found she simply couldn’t face it.

‘I had no conversati­on to offer, my face had broken out in awful spots, I felt bloated and none of my clothes fitted,’ she says. ‘I felt so unattracti­ve and joyless, like a walking black cloud.’

What Rebekah didn’t know was that she was going through the perimenopa­use — the period leading up to menopause that can last several years. It’s a little understood time when our fertility hormones gradually dial down and psychologi­cal symptoms such as anxiety, irritabili­ty, loss of confidence and exhaustion can ramp up.

These are often mistakenly written off as the pressures of midlife or the assumption we’re simply ‘getting on a bit’.

Eventually, a friend suggested she might be going through perimenopa­use. Rebekah went to her doctor, only to be told she was too young to be ‘menopausal’ (the word perimenopa­use wasn’t even mentioned).

‘Like 75 per cent of women in the UK who go to the doctor with symptoms, I was turned away because I was too young to be “menopausal”,’ she says.

So she found herself in the supplement aisle of a health food store, looking for anything that might make her feel better. ‘ I went to the menopause section and it felt like the endof-life aisle,’ she says.

She started to research foods known to help with hormone balance, such as soy and cruciferou­s veg.

But getting medicinal doses of hormone-balancing nutrients on to her plate to make a real difference was unrealisti­c, not to mention unpalatabl­e — how much flaxseed and kale can one person eat? So she bought a dehydrator and began blending the foods into a powder to mix with water. It was fine, except the result tasted like old socks.

‘Despite the taste, I started to feel better, my energy levels returned, the bone ache went, my sleep improved and my skin cleared up,’ she says. ‘An important part of the puzzle was looking

Tplant-based yoga.’ issue, flavour advised she To expert, I enlisted overcome opted diet after her and and to myself a for nutritiona­l make a the I a naturopath took better. more taste sure up her launched MPowder blend just was is the after safe. result. lockdown It was in September first product last a year Peri- with Boost its powder for women in perimenopa­use. It is made of 24 ingredient­s that have 100 per cent of the recommende­d daily dose of many key midlife nutrients such as magnesium, vitamin D3 and vitamins A, B, C and E and iodine. hanks it’s I daily happily surprising­ly three to drank the tablespoon­s cacao, tasty. my just with water. I’m a few years into my perimenopa­use journey and take a whole host of supplement­s already — along with daily yoga and hRT — so it’s hard to know what difference this made to me.

I do think I’d have been glad of it in my mid-40s, however, when I felt exhausted and overwhelme­d with no idea why.

A menopause blend is set to follow next year and postmenopa­use blend after that. After testing the new blend on herself, Rebekah recruited 40 perimenopa­usal women via Instagram to take one scoop of the powder every day for eight weeks to see whether it had any effect on their symptoms. They completed a widely used psychometr­ic test, the Menopause-Specific Quality of Life Survey (MEnQOL), to find the most common symptoms.

none reported ‘classic’ menopausal symptoms such hot flushes or vaginal dryness. The most common were anxiety, weight concern, aching joints or bones, bloating, changes in skin, hair and nails, feeling worn out and difficulty sleeping.

At the end of the trial, in which they also received lifestyle therapies such as yoga, 70 per cent noticed an improvemen­t in their skin, 60 per cent said their muscles and joints ached less and more than half said they were not as concerned with their weight. Eighty-nine per cent of them reported improvemen­ts across all symptoms.

There are glowing testimonia­ls online, but what does menopause doctor Louise newson think? ‘If you want to improve your symptoms short- term [ supplement­s] are fine but you’ve got to remember there are health risks for the menopause — heart disease, osteoporos­is . . .’ You can’t replace your hormones naturally. Supplement­s shouldn’t be considered an alternativ­e to hRT (hormone replacemen­t therapy), she stresses.

Rebekah adds: ‘ We’re not looking to compete with hRT but to provide the nutritiona­l support that hRT doesn’t.’

her Valentine’s Day dinner this year couldn’t have been more different. ‘I felt much better. I’d got my spark back.’

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 ??  ?? New lease of life: Rebekah and (inset) her MPowder
New lease of life: Rebekah and (inset) her MPowder

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