Home Actress Jen Gunter HD Instagram Photos and Wallpapers April 2024 Jen Gunter Instagram - Lots of questions about testosterone lately and I am not sure why, but because of these I wrote a very detailed post for The Vajenda last week. I have included several slides summarizing the Global Consensus Statement on the Use of Testosterone for Women and a summary of the British Menopause Society recommendations. If the data is there to support testosterone for many reasons outside of low libido, why can’t any menopause of endocrine society find it? I also included a slide with the organizations that signed off on the statement. Here is the summary from my piece. Head to The Vajenda if you want the whole piece or the references: ✅ Testosterone levels gradually decrease throughout a woman’s lifetime. There is no sharp drop around menopause. 🤝The majority of testosterone is bound to carrier proteins, but we still don’t really understand what that means regarding testosterone’s impact on the body. 🏭Testosterone has a significant intracrinology, meaning it is also made inside cells, so testosterone levels really do not tell us the whole picture. ✅Checking testosterone for well-being or symptoms of menopause is unhelpful and a waste of your hard-earned money. ❓Testosterone levels don’t predict symptoms. 📊Current studies do not support the use of testosterone for ANY reason outside of treating libido. This includes muscle mass and protecting bone health. 📑Studies with primary ovarian insufficiency don’t show an added benefit from testosterone. 💪Improvement in muscle mass/strength likely only occurs when testosterone levels are much higher than normal.

Jen Gunter Instagram – Lots of questions about testosterone lately and I am not sure why, but because of these I wrote a very detailed post for The Vajenda last week. I have included several slides summarizing the Global Consensus Statement on the Use of Testosterone for Women and a summary of the British Menopause Society recommendations. If the data is there to support testosterone for many reasons outside of low libido, why can’t any menopause of endocrine society find it? I also included a slide with the organizations that signed off on the statement. Here is the summary from my piece. Head to The Vajenda if you want the whole piece or the references: ✅ Testosterone levels gradually decrease throughout a woman’s lifetime. There is no sharp drop around menopause. 🤝The majority of testosterone is bound to carrier proteins, but we still don’t really understand what that means regarding testosterone’s impact on the body. 🏭Testosterone has a significant intracrinology, meaning it is also made inside cells, so testosterone levels really do not tell us the whole picture. ✅Checking testosterone for well-being or symptoms of menopause is unhelpful and a waste of your hard-earned money. ❓Testosterone levels don’t predict symptoms. 📊Current studies do not support the use of testosterone for ANY reason outside of treating libido. This includes muscle mass and protecting bone health. 📑Studies with primary ovarian insufficiency don’t show an added benefit from testosterone. 💪Improvement in muscle mass/strength likely only occurs when testosterone levels are much higher than normal.

Jen Gunter Instagram - Lots of questions about testosterone lately and I am not sure why, but because of these I wrote a very detailed post for The Vajenda last week. I have included several slides summarizing the Global Consensus Statement on the Use of Testosterone for Women and a summary of the British Menopause Society recommendations. If the data is there to support testosterone for many reasons outside of low libido, why can’t any menopause of endocrine society find it? I also included a slide with the organizations that signed off on the statement. Here is the summary from my piece. Head to The Vajenda if you want the whole piece or the references: ✅ Testosterone levels gradually decrease throughout a woman’s lifetime. There is no sharp drop around menopause. 🤝The majority of testosterone is bound to carrier proteins, but we still don’t really understand what that means regarding testosterone’s impact on the body. 🏭Testosterone has a significant intracrinology, meaning it is also made inside cells, so testosterone levels really do not tell us the whole picture. ✅Checking testosterone for well-being or symptoms of menopause is unhelpful and a waste of your hard-earned money. ❓Testosterone levels don’t predict symptoms. 📊Current studies do not support the use of testosterone for ANY reason outside of treating libido. This includes muscle mass and protecting bone health. 📑Studies with primary ovarian insufficiency don’t show an added benefit from testosterone. 💪Improvement in muscle mass/strength likely only occurs when testosterone levels are much higher than normal.

Jen Gunter Instagram – Lots of questions about testosterone lately and I am not sure why, but because of these I wrote a very detailed post for The Vajenda last week.

I have included several slides summarizing the Global Consensus Statement on the Use of Testosterone for Women and a summary of the British Menopause Society recommendations. If the data is there to support testosterone for many reasons outside of low libido, why can’t any menopause of endocrine society find it? I also included a slide with the organizations that signed off on the statement.

Here is the summary from my piece. Head to The Vajenda if you want the whole piece or the references:

✅ Testosterone levels gradually decrease throughout a woman’s lifetime. There is no sharp drop around menopause.

🤝The majority of testosterone is bound to carrier proteins, but we still don’t really understand what that means regarding testosterone’s impact on the body.

🏭Testosterone has a significant intracrinology, meaning it is also made inside cells, so testosterone levels really do not tell us the whole picture.

✅Checking testosterone for well-being or symptoms of menopause is unhelpful and a waste of your hard-earned money.

❓Testosterone levels don’t predict symptoms.

📊Current studies do not support the use of testosterone for ANY reason outside of treating libido. This includes muscle mass and protecting bone health.

📑Studies with primary ovarian insufficiency don’t show an added benefit from testosterone.

💪Improvement in muscle mass/strength likely only occurs when testosterone levels are much higher than normal. | Posted on 24/Apr/2024 04:59:36

Jen Gunter Instagram – Pleasantly surprised to find out that Blood: The Science, Medicine, and Mythology of Menstruation is one of the most popular nonfiction books on @goodreads so far for 2024. 

I was surprised because my books always get some purposely awful reviews from the unregulated, unstudied pharmaceutical industry, a.k.a. those who support naturopaths, functional providers or all kinds, and the wellness industrial complex. To be clear, I review the evidence, such as it is, for many “natural” products in this book and it is patriarchal to say women should follow practices and therapies with essentially zero quality research! Don’t women deserve research? 🧐 it’s not my fault the studies are crap and the unscrupulous have no issue with that! I discuss a variety of different supplements in the book and present the research such as it is so people can make informed choices. 

I get questions in my DMs constantly, and almost always you can find the answer in Blood, one of my other books, or on The Vajenda! For example, this week I was asked about CBD tampons (info is in Blood), what to do when you are in your 20s and have not had a period in 4 months (answer in Blood), and what do I think of supplements for PMS (also in Blood!). 

Thank you to everyone who read Blood and reviewed it. It means a lot of me.
Jen Gunter Instagram – Son who is back from college wanted homemade bagels. I asked if he could wait 3 ish hours? And he could.

Very tasty! Not that much effort. Made the dough. Went to the store while it proofed and to get some lox. 

Then boiled and baked! 

Recipe is from the always amazing @sallysbakeblog

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