What Your Period Might Reveal About Your Health
Yet hormones are hardly a primary component of the national conversation about health. Alisa Vitti, a women's health specialist, founder of FloLiving, and author of WomanCode, seeks to change that. We connected with Vitti to talk about hormones, health, and how you can change your health with food.
Paying Attention to Periods
"For so long women have
brushed aside and failed to take seriously the symptoms that we
attribute to our hormones, such as PMS, cramps, and acne,” Vitti says.
Yet strong evidence points to the fact that hormones are important—for both men and women—at every stage of our lives.
Some of the most convincing evidence comes from a 2009 study
that was funded by the NIH. The study yielded two primary findings:
One, that women who experienced untreated hormonal issues—such as premenstrual syndrome
(PMS) and infertility—prior to menopause were more likely to develop
diseases of inflammation (such as diabetes, heart disease, and cancer)
later in life. And two, that women can improve their hormonal balance with diet and lifestyle changes.
Armed
with this knowledge, Vitti is on a mission to “turn women on to how
powerful their bodies are.” Instead of joking about crankiness and
chocolate cravings at a certain time of the month, Vitti wants women to
get in touch with their menstrual cycles—to figure out what's out of
balance and how to make changes to improve overall health.
Getting Into the Flow
To that end, Vitti created the WomanCode System—an
online platform designed to help women permanently balance their
hormones via education, eating plans, personal counseling, and symptom
tracking. (She also published a book by the same name.) The idea is to
use the program to enhance standard medical care. “Every meal, every
day, you need a system that’s going to help you succeed [in your health
goals]," Vitti says.
The easiest way to learn about what’s going
on with your body, according to Vitti, is simply to look before you
flush. The color, consistency, flow, and timing of menstruation can all
yield insight into your current state of health. Other markers of
hormonal imbalances—many of which are considered par for the course for
menstruating women—include breast tenderness, moodiness, acne, dandruff,
constipation, eczema or rosacea, and changing energy levels.
Blocking Optimal Health
No surprise here, these issues are remarkably common. An estimated 85 percent of menstruating women experience at least one symptom of PMS each month, while approximately 10 percent of women in the U.S. struggle with infertility issues, and as many as one in 10 suffer from PCOS.
All
told, Vitti says, more than 20 million women in the U.S. alone struggle
with menstrual and other hormonal health issues. As Vitti sees it,
these hormonal imbalances are caused by what she refers to as “flow
blockers"—pesticides and chemicals in our foods, cosmetics, and home and
work environments, which, according to some studies, have been linked
to hormonal disruption.
Hormones are also affected by what we eat. “The primary
function of the endocrine system [which relies on hormones for proper
function] is to safeguard the transport of sugar throughout the body,”
Vitti says. Thus she asserts it’s vital to maintain blood sugar
stability. In some ways, the idea is nothing new: Experts have long
advocated that people avoid blood sugar spikes and crashes, primarily by
avoiding refined carbs.
What's unique about Vitti’s approach is the special emphasis she places
on the connection between blood sugar and hormonal balance.
Of course, stress also plays a role in hormonal activity. And while we can't always control external stressors, such as a job loss or family tragedy, Vitti is confident we can control
internal stressors, such as blood sugar, exposure to pesticides, and
lack of micronutrients, simply by refining our food choices. These
choices can, in turn, promote a healthier hormonal cycle—which Vitti
sees as essential to overall wellness.
Creating Cyclical Lifestyles
In addition to dietary changes, Vitti advocates establishing a lifestyle that meshes with the hormonal cycle.
“The four-week menstrual cycle is a creation cycle,” Vitti says.
Indeed, some research supports the idea that hormonal cycles are tied to creativity.
Vitti views the follicular phase as a highly creative, idea-generating
phase; during ovulation, women may excel at communication skills; during
the luteal (or, loosely, the premenstrual) phase, focus may improve,
providing energy for administrative tasks (e.g., organizing a shoe
closet or finishing a project); and menstruation is a time for
“evaluation and course correction.”
Rather than fighting against
or powering through these phases, Vitti says people should (quite
literally) surrender to the flow. She points out that no person (of any
gender) can act exactly the same way every single day but rather
experiences cyclical shifts in energy and focus. By observing these
patterns, people can create optimized schedules that sync up with our
energy and needs.
“Let’s figure out how our body is
communicating data to us in real time every day so that we can kick ass
in every area of our lives,” Vitti says. “That, for me, is what it is
for a woman to get in the flow.”
The views expressed here belong exclusively to Alisa Vitti and do not necessarily reflect the opinions or thoughts of Greatist.
Originally published April 2013. Updated March 2016.

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