Dr. Donata Girolamo, ND

How awful does it feel to be bloated, swollen, puffy, and uncomfortable 1-2 weeks per month? A lot of women describe feeling this way at some point before their period comes; one source quoting over 50% of PMS sufferers1. Water retention can affect the face, hands, lower legs, and abdomen. Some women even notice that they regularly gain 4-5 lbs during this time before their period. Many women already try reducing sodium intake during this time, or note that they already have a great whole foods diet. So what gives?

Imbalances That Cause Water Retention

From a traditional Chinese Medicine perspective, the spleen and kidneys may be deficient, and qi (life force) may be stagnant2. The spleen is responsible for transforming and transporting foods and fluid and the kidneys for water metabolism and fluid excretion. Qi is our life force and can become blocked. Causes of these imbalances that lead to water retention include excessive physical work and emotional stress3.

Hormonal imbalances such as elevated estrogen, aldosterone, insulin, and prolactin can cause water retention along with an underactive thyroid and low dopamine4. There are many causes for these imbalances, including stress, sugar intake, nutrient deficiencies, poor liver detoxification due to diet, stress, pharmaceuticals and candida, to list some.

Dietary Factors That Cause Water Retention

Processed foods offer less vitamins, minerals, anti-oxidants, and fiber than whole foods. Even when synthetic vitamins are added in, nothing beats the real food source. Stress will cause the body to become deficient in certain nutrients, because the body uses more during the stress response. Pharmaceuticals like the birth control pill will cause deficiencies as well, along with blockages in absorption such as low hydrochloric acid and bile production, and candida. Deficiencies of calcium, magnesium, B6 and vitamin E can contribute to water retention5.

Treatments

If you experience bloating before your period, work with your naturopathic doctor to resolve the underlying reasons. Both the Chinese and western causes of water retention include imbalances in the body that when resolved, promote a feeling of wellness, balance, and an experience of ‘fitting in your skin’.


Girolamo_headshotAfter graduating from the University of Toronto with an Honours Bachelor of Arts degree, Dr. Donata Girolamo then pursued her passion for holistic medicine at the Canadian College of Naturopathic Medicine in Toronto, becoming a licensed and registered Naturopathic Doctor.

Dr. Donata Girolamo maintains a private family practice with special interests in fertility and mental wellness. Her mission is to optimize your health care by combining evidence-based medicine with the art and wisdom of traditional medicine. To address your health concerns she uses acupuncture, herbs, homeopathy, nutrition and lifestyle counseling.

She maintains inspired through continuing education, and has extensive training in homeopathy, biotherapeutic drainage, auricular medicine, and medical intuition. She has additional certification in Wilson’s Temperature Syndrome, First Line Therapy; a lifestyle program for weight loss and chronic disease prevention and treatment, and Psychosomatic Energetics. Due to her interest in the link between mind, body and spirit, Dr. Girolamo has taken intensive courses in Vipassana and Mindfulness meditation, and mind-body medicine through The Benson-Henry Institute for Mind-Body medicine.

She is certified by the Board of Directors of Drugless Therapy Naturopathy and an active member of The Ontario Association of Naturopathic Doctors, the Canadian Association of Naturopathic Doctors, and the Association of Perinatal Naturopathic Doctors. She is a regular contributor to Health Wellness and Safety magazine, and has written for Canadian Health and Lifestyle. She is a guest speaker at Niagara College, teaching stress management with meditation, and is active in the community, giving health talks to groups like Run Girl Run, Happy Hearts, Niagara Pain Program, and Form Fitness. She is appearing in a fertility segment on CHCH news, and has been interviewed on 610 CKTB newstalk radio regarding menopause. Understanding and sharing the body’s wisdom is not only a passion, but her calling.


References:

  1. Kaur, SD, Dean, C, Danylak-Arhanic, M. The complete natural medicine guide to women’s health. Toronto: R. Rose; 2005.
  2. Maciocia, G. Obstetrics and gynecology in Chinese medicine. New York: Churchill Livingstone; 1998.
  3. Maciocia, G. Obstetrics and gynecology in Chinese medicine. New York: Churchill Livingstone; 1998.
  4. Kaur, SD, Dean, C, Danylak-Arhanic, M. The complete natural medicine guide to women’s health. Toronto: R. Rose; 2005.
  5. Kaur, SD, Dean, C, Danylak-Arhanic, M. The complete natural medicine guide to women’s health. Toronto: R. Rose; 2005.
  6. Watner, J, Martin, LJ. Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease Rates Rising in U.S. WebMD. Available at: http://www.webmd.com/diet/20110402/non-alcoholic-fatty-liver-disease-rates-rising-in-us. Accessed February 13, 2016.
  7. Maciocia, G. Obstetrics and gynecology in Chinese medicine. New York: Churchill Livingstone; 1998.
  8. Maciocia, G. Obstetrics and gynecology in Chinese medicine. New York: Churchill Livingstone; 1998.
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