Give us a Call
+1 (915) 412-6680
Send us a Message
[email protected]
Opening Hours
Mon-Thu: 7 AM - 7 PM
Fri - Sun: Closed

Hormonal Health: What You Need to Know About Sarcopenia


Explore the connection between sarcopenia and hormonal health for better overall vitality and strength in your daily life.

Abstract

Welcome to this in-depth exploration of hormonal health, cellular aging, and the management of chronic diseases like cancer. As a clinician with a diverse background in chiropractic, nursing, and functional medicine, my goal is to bridge the gap between conventional treatments and integrative therapies. In this educational post, I will guide you through the intricate world of hormone replacement therapy (HRT), discussing its profound impact on the body and brain, particularly in the context of aging and menopause. We will delve into the critical roles of hormones like estrogen and progesterone, examining how their balance affects everything from bone density and cognitive function to cancer risk. I will present the latest findings from leading researchers, highlighting the nuanced differences between synthetic and bioidentical hormones and why this distinction matters for long-term health. Furthermore, we will explore the concept of metabolic flexibility and the physiological underpinnings of conditions like insulin resistance, explaining how diet and lifestyle interventions can powerfully influence cellular health. Finally, I will explain how integrative chiropractic care serves as a foundational element in this holistic model, supporting the nervous system and enhancing the body’s innate ability to heal, thereby creating a comprehensive and personalized path to wellness.


The Hormone Conundrum: Understanding the Brain-Body Connection in Aging

In my years of clinical practice, one of the most common and often misunderstood topics I encounter is hormonal change, especially during menopause. Many patients come to me with a sense of inevitability about the associated symptoms—hot flashes, brain fog, sleep disturbances, and a general decline in vitality. A prevalent belief is that these are simply unavoidable consequences of aging. However, modern, evidence-based research tells us a different story.

When a woman’s ovaries cease producing estrogen during menopause, it’s not just a reproductive event; it’s a systemic one that profoundly affects the entire body, most notably the brain. Think of estrogen as a master regulator for cerebral function. It is crucial for neurotransmitter synthesis, glucose utilization, and neuronal protection.

For example, when estrogen levels plummet, the brain’s ability to use glucose—its primary fuel source—is significantly impaired. This metabolic shift can lead to the classic “brain fog,” memory lapses, and even an increased risk for neurodegenerative diseases later in life. This isn’t a temporary state. As soon as a woman stops producing her own ovarian estrogen or discontinues hormone replacement therapy, these neurological changes can manifest. My clinical observations align with this; I’ve seen patients who stop HRT after years of use and report an almost immediate return of cognitive and vasomotor symptoms (like hot flashes), regardless of how long they were on the therapy. The brain doesn’t just “get used to it” and pick up the slack. The hormonal support is either there or it isn’t.

This brings us to a critical point: the notion of “getting off” hormones as a goal. While this might seem prudent based on older, often misinterpreted studies, the physiological reality is that for many, these hormones are replacing a vital substance the body no longer makes. It’s akin to a person with hypothyroidism taking thyroid medication. We don’t advise them to “get off” their medication after a few years; we understand it is replacing a crucial hormone for life. The same logic should be applied to HRT, with careful consideration.


Re-evaluating Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT): Synthetic vs. Bioidentical

The conversation around HRT is often clouded by fear, largely stemming from the initial reports of the Women’s Health Initiative (WHI) study. This landmark study raised alarms about increased risks of breast cancer and cardiovascular events. However, a deeper dive into the methodology reveals critical flaws that limit its applicability to many women today.

  • The Problem with Progestins: The WHI primarily used a combination of conjugated equine estrogens (derived from horse urine) and a synthetic progestin called medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA). Research, including a pivotal study by Formby and Wiley (2012), has since demonstrated that synthetic progestins such as MPA can have a proliferative effect on breast tissue, thereby encouraging cancer cell growth.
  • The Power of Bioidentical Progesterone: In stark contrast, bioidentical progesterone—which is molecularly identical to the progesterone our bodies produce—exhibits a different, protective action. It promotes apoptosis, or programmed cell death, in breast cancer cells. This means it helps the body eliminate abnormal cells rather than allowing them to multiply.
  • The Estrogen-Progesterone Dance: Estrogen, when unopposed, can stimulate cell growth (the mitogenic effect). Progesterone’s role is to balance this by signaling for cell differentiation and controlled cell death. When you use a synthetic progestin that fails to provide this apoptotic signal, you lose the protective balance, creating an environment where estrogen’s proliferative effects can dominate. This is a crucial distinction that is often lost in mainstream discussions.

In my practice, I emphasize the importance of using bioidentical hormones. The goal is to replicate the body’s natural hormonal milieu as closely as possible, providing the benefits of estrogen while ensuring the protective counterbalance of progesterone. We don’t just give hormones; we test, monitor, and tailor the dosage to achieve a physiological balance that supports long-term health, not just symptom relief.


The Oncologist’s Perspective: Bridging the Gap with Evidence

One of the greatest challenges my patients face is navigating conversations about HRT with their oncologists, particularly after a cancer diagnosis like breast cancer. The conventional oncology perspective is often one of extreme caution, recommending the avoidance of all hormones. While this stems from a desire to “do no harm,” it is often based on an outdated and incomplete understanding of hormonal physiology.

My approach is to empower my patients with data. We don’t just talk; we test. We use advanced functional testing, such as the DUTCH (Dried Urine Test for Comprehensive Hormones), to map a patient’s hormone metabolites. This allows us to see not just the level of estrogen but how the body is processing it.

  • Protective vs. Risky Metabolites: Estrogen is broken down into several metabolites. Some, like 2-hydroxyestrone (2-OHE1), are considered protective. Others, like 4-hydroxyestrone (4-OHE1) and 16-alpha-hydroxyestrone (16α-OHE1), can have genotoxic effects, meaning they can damage DNA and increase cancer risk.
  • Empowering the Patient-Doctor Dialogue: By presenting an oncologist with a report indicating that a patient’s metabolic pathways favor the protective 2-OHE1 pathway, we can shift the conversation. We can demonstrate, with objective data, that the hormonal environment does not promote cancer. We can show that targeted nutritional support (such as DIM or I3C from cruciferous vegetables) can further enhance these protective pathways.

This transforms the discussion from one based on fear and generalization to one based on the patient’s unique biochemistry. It allows for a collaborative and informed decision-making process, in which the oncologist can see that we are not being reckless but are instead precise and evidence-based in our approach to improving the patient’s quality of life.


*HORMONAL DYSFUNCTIONS* Assessment and treatments-Video


Metabolic Flexibility: The Foundation of Cellular Health

Beyond hormones, the concept of metabolic flexibility is central to my integrative philosophy. This refers to the body’s ability to efficiently switch between burning carbohydrates (glucose) and fats (ketones) for energy. A loss of this flexibility, a condition known as insulin resistance, is at the root of most chronic diseases we face today, from type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease to Alzheimer’s and even cancer.

Insulin resistance occurs when our cells, primarily in the muscle, liver, and fat tissue, become “numb” to the effects of insulin. Here’s a simplified breakdown of this complex process:

  1. The Trigger: A diet high in refined carbohydrates and sugars leads to chronically elevated blood glucose.
  2. The Response: The pancreas works overtime, pumping out more and more insulin to try and force glucose into the resistant cells.
  3. The Consequence: This state of hyperinsulinemia (high insulin) is highly inflammatory and metabolically damaging. It promotes fat storage, increases oxidative stress, and impairs the body’s ability to burn its own fat for fuel.

From a cancer perspective, this is particularly dangerous. Many cancer cells have an abundance of insulin receptors and rely heavily on glucose for their rapid growth and proliferation—a phenomenon known as the Warburg effect. By maintaining a state of high blood sugar and high insulin, we are, in essence, feeding the cancer.

My clinical protocol focuses on restoring metabolic flexibility through targeted dietary interventions, such as a well-formulated ketogenic or low-carbohydrate diet. The goal is to lower insulin levels, reduce inflammation, and encourage the body to become efficient at burning fat. This not only helps with weight management but also starves cancer cells of their preferred fuel and creates a less hospitable environment for their growth. We use continuous glucose monitors (CGMs) and regular blood work to track progress and provide patients with real-time feedback, empowering them to take control of their metabolic health.


The Role of Integrative Chiropractic Care in Systemic Wellness

Now, you may be wondering how chiropractic care fits into this complex picture of hormones and metabolism. The connection is profound and lies in the function of the autonomic nervous system (ANS). The ANS is the master control system for all our unconscious bodily functions—heart rate, digestion, immune response, and, crucially, hormone regulation.

The ANS has two main branches:

  • The sympathetic nervous system (the “fight or flight” response).
  • The parasympathetic nervous system (the “rest and digest” response).

In our modern, high-stress world, most people are stuck in a state of sympathetic dominance. This chronic stress state has devastating effects: it elevates cortisol, disrupts sleep, impairs digestion, and contributes directly to insulin resistance and hormonal imbalance.

Chiropractic adjustments are not just about addressing back pain or neck stiffness. At their core, they are a neurological intervention. By correcting spinal misalignments, known as vertebral subluxations, we reduce physical stress on the nervous system. This helps to down-regulate the sympathetic “fight or flight” response and promote a shift toward the healing “rest and digest” parasympathetic state.

At our clinics, we use specialized techniques to assess and improve ANS function. By improving heart rate variability (HRV)—a key marker of autonomic balance—we can enhance the body’s resilience to stress. This creates a physiological foundation upon which all other therapies—be it hormonal, nutritional, or metabolic—can be more effective. A well-regulated nervous system allows for better hormone signaling, improved insulin sensitivity, and a more robust immune response. It is the soil in which the seeds of health can truly flourish.

In conclusion, true health is not achieved by treating symptoms in isolation. It requires an integrative, whole-body approach that honors the intricate connections among our structure, nervous system, hormones, and metabolism. By combining the latest in evidence-based functional medicine with foundational chiropractic care, we can empower our patients to move beyond mere disease management and embark on a journey toward optimal, vibrant health.


References


SEO Tags: Integrative Chiropractic, Functional Medicine, Hormone Replacement Therapy, Dr. Alexander Jimenez, Bioidentical Hormones, Menopause, Estrogen, Progesterone, Insulin Resistance, Metabolic Flexibility, Cancer Metabolism, Autonomic Nervous System, Vertebral Subluxation, DUTCH Test, Chronic Disease Management, Holistic Health, Evidence-Based Care, El Paso Chiropractor.

Integrative Hormone Health and Metabolic Resilience

Integrative Hormone Health and Metabolic Resilience

Integrative Hormone Health and Metabolic Resilience

Abstract

This educational post presents a practical, evidence-based roadmap for addressing complex hormone health, pelvic bleeding, urinary and infectious issues, metabolic and thyroid considerations, perimenopause, sleep, cognition, and gut-brain integration. As Dr. Alexander Jimenez, I present evidence-based strategies integrating precision diagnostics, lifestyle medicine, nutraceuticals, and chiropractic care, informed by my clinical experience and peer-reviewed research. I share structured decision trees for discontinuing high-risk oral contraceptives, evaluating postmenopausal bleeding, optimizing testosterone therapy, avoiding unnecessary antibiotic treatments, supporting reproductive planning with genetic counseling, and stabilizing mood and cognition through gut, sleep, and nervous system interventions. This post provides clear protocols, rationales, and physiology so you can understand not only what to do but also why it works.

Introduction: How I Approach Complex Cases With Modern, Evidence-Based Care

As a clinician working at the intersection of chiropractic medicine, family practice, functional medicine, and integrative care, I see patients whose stories rarely fit into clear categories. The questions range from “Why am I bleeding months after menopause?” to “Is my testosterone causing water retention?” to “Do we treat group A strep in urinary infections?” to “How do we support a young adult with ADHD without overmedicating?” The answers require a blend of physiology, clinical judgment, careful monitoring, and a collaborative strategy that respects both modern guidelines and whole-person health.

Over the years, I have refined protocols based on the current literature and what truly helps patients improve function and quality of life. Below, I walk you through a set of conceptual areas, each one grounded in research and enhanced by integrative chiropractic care to optimize neuromusculoskeletal balance, autonomic regulation, and rehabilitation outcomes. My goal is to help patients and clinicians understand the “why” behind every step.

Hormone Therapy Foundations: Physiology, Protocols, and Safety

Key themes

  • Hormones are signals that modulate cellular function across systems, including the nervous, immune, cardiovascular, bone, and metabolic networks.
  • The body seeks homeostasis; our job is to support signaling patterns, receptor sensitivity, and tissue-level responses without overdriving any pathway.
  • Precision dosing and monitoring reduce adverse effects and improve outcomes.

Physiological underpinnings

  • Estrogen supports endothelial function, neural plasticity, bone mineralization, and collagen integrity. In perimenopause, oscillations in estradiol can cause unpredictable vasomotor symptoms, mood shifts, and bleeding pattern variability as ovaries intermittently “kick back in.”
  • Progesterone modulates GABAergic tone in the brain, stabilizes the endometrium, and balances estrogenic proliferation in uterine tissue. It supports sleep and reduces anxiety for many individuals through neurosteroid pathways.
  • Testosterone influences erythropoiesis, muscle protein synthesis, libido, and mood. Excessive levels can cause fluid retention, acne, and elevations in hematocrit; insufficient levels may present with fatigue, low motivation, and reduced muscle mass.

Clinical rationale

  • Use hormone therapy to restore physiologic ranges, not to chase symptoms. We titrate to the lowest effective dose that stabilizes a patient’s quality of life and biomarkers.
  • Cycle-based variability matters. In perimenopause, bleeding after several months of amenorrhea can occur due to transient estrogen rises. The key is ruling out pathology while acknowledging normal variability.

How integrative chiropractic care fits

  • Autonomic regulation: Chiropractic approaches can reduce sympathetically mediated tension, improve sleep and recovery, and enhance the body’s ability to integrate hormone signaling by stabilizing neuromusculoskeletal inputs.
  • Pelvic biomechanics: Pelvic floor and sacroiliac alignment impact pelvic organ function, venous return, and lymphatic flow—relevant for pelvic congestion and postmenopausal bleeding comfort.
  • Rehab progression: Strengthening and mobility prescriptions support bone density, insulin sensitivity, and mood stabilization, synergizing with hormone therapy.

Decision-Making in Perimenopause and Postmenopausal Bleeding

What is typical, and when to evaluate

  • Perimenopause is characterized by high-low-high estrogen fluctuations. A woman who has been amenorrheic for several months may experience a spontaneous bleed when estradiol rises, and the endometrium responds.
  • After 12 months of amenorrhea, any new bleeding is considered postmenopausal bleeding and warrants evaluation to exclude endometrial pathology.

Evaluation steps and reasoning

  • History and risk factors: Age, obesity, nulliparity, unopposed estrogen exposure, and tamoxifen use.
  • Examination and imaging: We employ transvaginal ultrasound to assess endometrial thickness and look for polyps or fibroids. If the endometrium is thickened or focal lesions are suspected, sonohysterography or hysteroscopy with biopsy may be indicated.
  • Endometrial biopsy: Rules out hyperplasia or carcinoma when imaging or clinical suspicion is high.

Why this protocol

  • The goal is to distinguish physiologic perimenopausal variability from structural lesions. Polyps and fibroids are common; treating them appropriately (e.g., uterine artery embolization for fibroids) allows safe resumption of hormone therapy when indicated. I have seen patients resume progesterone or combined therapy with no further withdrawal bleeds after targeted intervention, consistent with the literature on treating the underlying structural cause rather than halting all hormone care.

Integrative chiropractic role

  • Pelvic alignment and diaphragm-pelvic floor coordination can reduce pelvic venous stasis, relieve low back and sacral tension, and improve tolerance to gynecologic evaluations and interventions. We incorporate breath mechanics, thoracolumbar mobility, and hip stability into a comprehensive plan.

Safety Considerations: Discontinuing High-Risk Oral Contraceptives

Why oral contraceptives may pose a risk

  • Combined oral contraceptives elevate sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG), often reducing free testosterone and contributing to fatigue or low libido.
  • They increase the risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE), including deep vein thrombosis (DVT) and pulmonary embolism (PE), especially in individuals with cardiovascular risk factors.

Decision tree

  • If a patient has used combined oral contraceptives for more than a decade and presents with risk factors (e.g., prior stents, smoking, immobility), counseling focuses on discontinuation and transitioning to safer options such as levonorgestrel intrauterine devices, which carry lower systemic risk and reduce bleeding.
  • We explain the mechanism: estrogen-containing pills increase clotting factors and SHBG; removing the exposure reduces thrombotic risk and can normalize androgen availability.

Integrative chiropractic role

  • We provide postural and movement interventions to improve venous return, diaphragmatic excursion, and lymphatic drainage, which are particularly helpful for patients recovering from VTE or those with high sedentary time.

Addressing Testosterone Therapy: Dosing, Monitoring, and Side Effects

Clinical questions often raised

  • Is testosterone causing fluid retention or bloating after weight changes?
  • How do we reassure when total testosterone is high-normal (e.g., 1200–1400 ng/dL) but symptoms are stable?

Physiology and rationale

  • Testosterone can transiently increase sodium and water retention via renal effects and raise hematocrit through erythropoietic stimulation. However, weight loss from improved insulin sensitivity or caloric balance often reduces the need for prior dosing levels; hence, symptoms may reflect recalibration rather than pathology.
  • We monitor hematocrit, PSA (for males), lipids, liver enzymes, and consider estradiol levels due to aromatization. Our aim is symptom stability, biomarker safety, and improvements in functional strength.

Action steps

  • If bloating or water retention appears, reassess dosage, salt intake, sleep quality, and training volume. Consider a small dose reduction and recheck labs after 6–8 weeks.
  • Avoid co-treatments that claim to preserve sperm count without evidence. For example, prescribing hCG solely to “preserve sperm count” in men on testosterone may not produce the desired outcome; we test and verify. If fertility is a priority, collaborating with reproductive specialists and pausing testosterone therapy can be necessary.

Integrative chiropractic role

  • Strength programming, joint alignment, and ribcage mechanics enhance breathing efficiency and venous return, reducing perceived bloating. Neuromuscular training supports lean mass accrual and mitigates discomfort from dose adjustments.

Urinary Tract Infections: Targeted Treatment Without Overreach

Common misconceptions

  • Treating group A streptococcus in urinary tract infections is not standard. Most UTIs are caused by E. coli or other gram-negative organisms; management is guided by culture and sensitivity results. Over-treating non-dominant organisms increases the risk of antibiotic resistance without benefit.

Clinical reasoning

  • We treat the pathogen identified as the primary cause with the narrowest effective antibiotic. Recurrent staph skin infections in the history do not automatically preclude medications such as amitriptyline (Elavil); decisions hinge on the indication, risk-benefit profile, and current clinical status.

Integrative chiropractic role

  • Autonomic balance and pelvic floor rehabilitation can reduce urgency and improve voiding patterns. Addressing lumbopelvic mechanics helps recurrent lower urinary symptoms through improved nerve supply and muscular coordination.

Genetic Counseling, Family Planning, and Ethical Care

For a 28-year-old considering future family planning

  • We integrate genetic counseling to clarify inherited risks, discuss preconception optimization, and interpret comprehensive metabolic panels as context (not fate).
  • This process emphasizes empowerment, clear communication, and second opinions when uncertainty or anxiety arises.

Why this pathway matters

  • Patients deserve transparent, non-alarmist explanations and access to tools that inform long-term decisions. Genetic insights help tailor lifestyle and screening without defining identity.

Integrative chiropractic role

  • Stress-reduction techniques, breathing drills, and gentle adjustments can downshift autonomic arousal, making complex counseling sessions more manageable and improving adherence to health plans.

Perimenopause: The High-Low-High Pattern and Practical Management

Understanding the oscillations

  • The ovaries may intermittently produce estrogen, causing the return of bleeding after months of amenorrhea. This is often normal perimenopausal behavior, although each episode should be contextualized by risk, age, and prior patterns.

Clinical approach

  • Reassure and monitor rather than over-test if the clinical picture aligns with typical perimenopause. If bleeding persists or presents with red flags, proceed to imaging and biopsy per protocols.

Integrative chiropractic role

  • Managing thoracic mobility and ribcage mechanics improves hot-flash tolerance by enhancing thermoregulatory mechanisms and heat dissipation. Pelvic floor training aids comfort and reduces cramping sensations.

Gut-Brain Axis, ADHD, Anxiety, and Sleep

Core connections

  • Gut microbiome status influences neurotransmitter production, inflammation, and mood regulation. Progesterone’s GABAergic effects support sleep and anxiety reduction, while estrogen modulates serotonergic tone and vascular responsiveness in the brain.

Clinical strategy

  • For ADHD-like symptoms and anxiety, we start with sleep hygiene, nutritional optimization, and gut support. Targeting motility and microbiota diversity can improve cognition and mood. If motility is sluggish, we consider dietary fiber, hydration, and mitochondrial support. Medication decisions are individualized and layered after foundational physiology is stabilized.

Integrative chiropractic role

  • Vagal tone enhancement through cervical and thoracic work, diaphragmatic breathing, and postural correction helps reduce anxiety and supports sleep architecture. Structured movement plans improve executive function via increased prefrontal perfusion and neurotrophic signaling.

Thyroid, Iodine, and Halides: Keeping Science Front and Center

Clarifying iodine

  • Iodine is essential for thyroid hormone synthesis. However, blanket claims that other halides “replace” iodine and universally cause cancer are not supported by the weight of evidence. Excess iodine can trigger thyroid dysfunction in susceptible individuals; deficiency can impair hormone production. Balance is key.

Clinical approach

  • We screen thyroid function when clinically indicated, not reflexively in all cases. We consider TSH, free T4, free T3, and thyroid antibodies when symptoms warrant testing. Supplement iodine only when indicated, at appropriate doses, while monitoring for autoimmune flares.

Integrative chiropractic role

  • Address cervical mechanics and stress patterns that influence perceived throat tightness and fatigue. Movement prescriptions support metabolism and thermoregulation while we calibrate thyroid care using objective data.

Postmenopausal Bleeding With Structural Etiologies: Polyps and Fibroids

What we see

  • Some patients on hormone therapy may develop postmenopausal bleeding due to previously unrecognized endometrial polyps or uterine fibroids. In my practice, we often discover these via ultrasound.

Interventions and outcomes

  • Endometrial polyps may require removal. Fibroids can be managed via medical therapy, myomectomy, or uterine artery embolization. I have observed that patients often resume hormone therapy afterward without recurrence of bleeding when the structural issue is corrected—consistent with published outcomes showing durable symptom control.

Integrative chiropractic role

  • Post-procedural care includes pelvic floor re-education, lower abdominal fascial mobility, and graded return to activity, which helps circulation and comfort during recovery.

Medication Stewardship: When to Pause, Taper, or Discontinue

Principles

  • Choose the least intensive intervention that achieves the therapeutic goal.
  • Reassess regularly; what helped at one stage may need adjustment after weight loss, improved sleep, or reduced stress.

Decision-making examples

  • Amitriptyline for neuropathic pain or sleep: Evaluate infection risk based on context and history, but prior staph skin infections do not automatically disqualify its use. Monitor and adjust.
  • Oral contraceptives used long-term in individuals with cardiovascular risk: Favor discontinuation and safer alternatives due to PE/DVT/stroke risk and elevated SHBG.

Integrative chiropractic role

  • Taper plans are supported by autonomic regulation to reduce withdrawal symptoms. Breathing drills, gentle manual therapy, and pacing reduce the risk of relapse.

Communication and Counseling: Clarity Over Panic

What patients need

  • Transparent explanations, second-opinion encouragement when appropriate, and harm-reduction strategies.
  • Avoid panic by presenting data, decision trees, and timelines so patients can move forward with confidence.

Clinical scripts I use

  • “Your bleeding may be part of perimenopausal variability, but we’ll verify with imaging so we don’t miss a structural cause.”
  • “Your contraceptive pill increases clot risk and SHBG; an IUD can offer contraception without raising clotting factors.”
  • “Your testosterone level is high-normal; your symptoms suggest you may simply need a small dose recalibration after weight loss.”

Integrative chiropractic role

  • We provide consistent reinforcement through body education—how posture, breath, and movement change the physiology of stress. This improves adherence and reduces fear.

Practical Protocols and Checklists

Hormone care calibration

  • Evaluate symptoms: sleep, mood, bleeding, libido, energy.
  • Labs: estradiol, progesterone, total and free testosterone, SHBG, hematocrit, PSA (males), lipids, and liver enzymes.
  • Imaging for abnormal bleeding: transvaginal ultrasound; biopsy if indicated.
  • Adjust doses conservatively; recheck in 6–8 weeks.

UTI management

  • Culture-directed therapy; avoid treating non-dominant organisms.
  • Support hydration, bladder habits, and pelvic floor function.
  • Recurrent infections: consider urologic evaluation and address glycemic control.

ADHD/anxiety sleep plan

  • Sleep hygiene, circadian anchoring, aerobic activity, and resistance training.
  • Gut support: fiber, polyphenols, fermented foods if tolerated.
  • Behavioral counseling; medication only after foundational changes.

Thyroid monitoring

  • Test based on symptoms; avoid indiscriminate screening without a clinical rationale.
  • Iodine supplementation only when indicated; monitor for hyper- or hypothyroid shifts.

Integrative chiropractic elements

  • Autonomic downregulation: breathing, ribcage mechanics, cervical care.
  • Pelvic balance: sacroiliac alignment, pelvic floor coordination.
  • Rehabilitation: graded strength, mobility routines, gait, and balance work.

Clinical Observations From Practice

From my work at ChiroMed and across collaborative settings, I have repeatedly witnessed:

  • Patients discontinuing high-risk combined oral contraceptives experience increased vigor and reduced fatigue after SHBG levels normalize.
  • Treating structural uterine pathology allows for the resumption of hormone therapy without recurrent bleeding, restoring quality of life.
  • Thoughtful testosterone dosing with emphasis on function, not just numbers, reduces side effects and anxiety.
  • Integrative chiropractic care consistently improves adherence to medical plans by decreasing pain, enhancing sleep, and stabilizing autonomic tone.

Integrative Care Makes the Difference

What ties these threads together is the understanding that the body is an orchestra of signals. Hormones, nerves, muscles, vessels, and organs all participate. By aligning biomechanics and nervous system tone with precise medical interventions, we help the body integrate rather than fight change. The result is care that is safer, more humane, and more effective.


References