(25-06-2015, 22:14)hannah14 Wrote: So if the body hair comes from progesterone that is getting converted in androgens instead of aromatized in estrogen you should take an aromatizer?
For people without health problems, yes, and anti-reductase herbs are also useful here.
Generally, all serum estrogen comes from androgens. Aromatase can only help the body form estrogens from androgens. The ovaries do so much of creating androgens signaled by LH, and converting androgens into estrogen. Then PCOS is common with high androgens (perhaps more androgens than the ovaries are capable of aromatizing without help). Fatty tissue can also aromatize androgens, perhaps by herbs.
Quote:What are all the sorts of aromatizers available?
Peony, topical
tea tree, and topical
lavender. Those are the only herbal ones I'm familiar with. (mints too, but mints seem to raise androgens more than they aromatize them)
Quote:Do you also know what the possible side effects are from taking anti androgens?
There's a side effect from too much of anything that influences a hormone. Too much estrogens can desensitize certain tissue, or influence cancer; but it's the same with progesterone, and any other hormone. Balancing progesterone and estrogen helps counter each other's bad effects. Estrogen and progesterone receptors are in different reproductive tissue (ovum ducts, breasts, pituitary, neuro, follicles), which can sometimes cause tissue to grow or shrink if either hormone is by itself. Effects on the brain are behavioral, mostly the differences in women and men, and parents.
If its about issues in fibriotic breasts, I can only theorize, especially since I don't know what fibriotic tissue looks like. Estrogen could either alleviate it, or it could cause it to get worse. Both cases would possibly be due to growth, either by growing out to allow more space, or growing more in a fibriotic way.
progesterone causes branching like, <<<<<<< (pictorial of a branch)
estrogen allows more, <---<---<---< (spacing between branching)
If fibriotic breasts are mostly from too much clusters of branching with no space to spread out. Fibriotic breasts happen mostly during the luteal phase when progesterone is available. Then again, I don't know the effects of estrogens after fibriotic breasts have occured.
If you want an idea of what aromatase anti-androgens do, maybe look up finasteride for an idea (or educated guess). I'm against suggesting synthetics (and serums).
An Anti-DHT (anti-reductase) anti-estrogen would lower the effects of potent progestogens and DHT. These are
oatmeal, pumpkin (squash) seed, palm fruits, pygeum, red reishi. Some of these noticeably remove a little bit of body hair.
Androgens have been used to lower breasts problems, but then again, I don't know how effective this is in various cases.
This is theory of what aromatase herbs do on fibriotic breasts, and I wish for everyone to be cautious and to not get hurt. There are a lot of facts supported by studies of what aromatase does too. I can't be too sure when it comes to what estrogen does on already fibriotic breasts.
Green tea is the only one I'd suggest for fibriotic breasts. It lowers DHT, reduces androgens effects, increases tissue metabolism, and it has a good reputation against breast problems.