Book Review – Moods, Emotions and Aging by Phyllis Bronson, PhD

moods emotions and agingDr. Phyllis Bronson’s book, Moods, Emotions, and Aging, could not have been published at a better time. Dr. Bronson is a rare individual who brings science to practice in her role as a clinical biochemist. Too often, the science and studies are readily available but clinicians don’t or won’t seek them out. Or, if they do, they are ostracized by their peers for stepping out of the box their medical education has defined for them.

Brisdelle, a version of Paxil or paroxetine, has been approved by the FDA as a treatment for hot flashes, despite an advisory committee vote of 10-4 against it. Hot flashes, a symptom of menopause believed to be an effect of hormone deficiencies, may now be treated with a potent and highly addictive SSRI (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor) that has extremely dangerous side effects, including suicidal thoughts.

We don’t have to drug ourselves to address the consequences of age-related hormonal changes. Hot flashes are NOT the result of an SSRI deficiency! There are better answers and we have the power to demand them.

Moods, Emotions, and Aging will equip anyone facing the challenges of hormone deficiencies. Because she works with and writes about real people with serious mood and hormone imbalances, her readers may see themselves in the patient stories she tells and be inspired to take action to resolve their own health issues.

Dr.  Bronson asks the hard questions of our organized medical providers:

  • Since the WHI studies (which are discussed at length in the book) revealed significant problems with the use of Premarin and Prempro, why are patients still being prescribed these products (albeit in “lower” doses)?
  • Why are women being offered antidepressant drugs instead of estrogen hormones, when she has seen women with low estradiol levels resolve their complaint about brain fog within an hour after supplementing with estradiol?
  • Why are women systematically being denied the use of progesterone when their ovaries are removed, when the bioidentical hormone progesterone has been shown to be protective of nerve tissue and potentially protect against cancer?

In addition to the hormones made from cholesterol in our bodies (e.g., the sex and adrenal hormones), there are also hormones derived from amino acids. Amino acids are the building blocks of the proteins we eat, and they become available to the body when protein is digested. Dr. Bronson found that it is easy to supplement amino acids to help balance hormones such as dopamine and serotonin. Here’s a radical thought: Instead of blocking the metabolism and reuptake of serotonin in the nerve synapse, which is what SSRIs do to raise serotonin levels, what if we supplement the body with the building block amino acids needed to make more serotonin? This is the path Dr. Bronson prefers, and she describes in her book how this has worked successfully for her clients.

In the book Honest Medicine, Dr. Burt Berkson describes how medical students are not encouraged to question or think. Their education is now just “training” consisting of whatever the current consensus determines to be the current standard of care. Unfortunately, standards of care can be influenced by people with motives that are not necessarily in line with what might be best for individual patient care.

Is your practitioner willing to go beyond the “training” received in medical school? Is she or he ready to partner with you to achieve optimal individualized care? Then Dr. Bronson’s book will be an asset to both of you as you jointly evaluate your biochemical individuality and consider treatment accordingly.

Another valuable facet of Dr. Bronson’s book is the discussions of how emotional issues can both provoke and be a result of hormone disarray. With the myriad tools provided in this book, people who may have “lost” themselves emotionally may be able to find a pathway back.

Written by Carol Petersen, RPh, CNP – Women’s International Pharmacy
Edited by Michelle Violi, PharmD – Women’s International Pharmacy
© Women’s International Pharmacy
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