Hello all - I've just joined. I have been struggling with multiple symptoms for 2 years and finally went to the GP on Friday, an appointment I had waited 3 weeks for. She was billed as having a special interest in women's services. She was absolutely lovely and couldn't have been more sympathetic, but ... she didn't have a clue it seemed to me when it came to knowing what to prescribe! I asked her about bioidentical hormones having done a little bit of reading and she said she had never heard the word bioidentical before 😮. She gave me a prescription for elleste duet conti 2mg and said come back in a month to tell her how I am, and in the meantime for me to do some research on the bioidenticals and we could discuss it then. So after 3 days on the elleste I have raging thrush and awful weepy anxious crying fits. Have discovered since friday (having had my email question answered by Dr Currie) that what I had been given is fairly high dose and that she recommends starting lower dose. The GP thought my symptoms were severe which is why I think she went in high dose but I am obviously sensitive to what I have taken. To be honest I am just on here ranting. I can't believe a GP who is supposed to have a special interest in women's health has never heard of bioidentical hormones though I do stress she was delightful and so sympathieic. I feel gutted that I didn't do my research before last week's appointment so that I am now in the situation of having been give the wrong stuff and now will have to wait ages to see her again and get it put right. And I really feel the weight of responsibility for basically telling her what I need prescribed! Having made the very difficult decision to try HRT I now feel I have little confidence that my doctor is able to look after me properly. There is a menopause clinic here which has a 3 month waiting list so I think I maybe need to ask for referral to that and just sit tight. Bloody hell!!!
I quite agree da66 - it is absolutely appalling that this doctor who professes to have an interest in women's health does not know what HRT to prescribe, and has never heard of the term "bio-identical". This should be at the forefront of her knowledge - the confusion (the con) perpetrated by the compound bio-identical hormone therapy lobby! Great that she is sympathetic but no marks for knowledge. There really is no excuse for a women's doctor especially!
I agree no doctor should start you off on 2 mg dose and especially not a continous combined HRT with norethisterone in it. I have justed posted on another thread about "low-grade progestogenic side effects" which is what many women get on continuous combined HRT - even with progesterone ( Utrogestan).
If you have a menopause clinic then yes do ask for a referral but in the meantime do ask for oestrogen and progesterone from your GP. I have almost only ever used this type of HRT from when I started HRT in late peri-menopause. In contrast to Mary G I use oestrogen patches (estradot are really small) and progesterone vaginally on a longer cycle than 4 weeks (with the sanction of my well-informed women's health specialist GP!).
The licensed dose of utrogestan is 200 mg orally for 12 days per month if you take it cyclically and maybe start with this but be prepared to discuss changes to this with your GP ( or at the meno clinic) if you develop side effects. I use it vaginally too.
Women differ in how well they absorb the different types of oestrogen - ie pill patch or gel - so partly it is down to this and partly personal preference. Patches are changed usually twice weekly, and gel applied daily or twice daily - so it also depends on your life-style and circumstances too.
Here are all the different oestrogen types and doses:
http://www.menopausematters.co.uk/treatafter.phpand progestogens (including utrogestan - maybe in your doctor's book as micronised progesterone) here:
http://www.menopausematters.co.uk/to_progestogens.phpDo print off this information from the website and if your GP is doubtful - refer her to the British Menopause Society of which Dr Currie is currently chair!!
it is your right to have the medication you choose to treat your menopausal symptoms.
Good luck and let us know how you get on
Hurdity
x