How Our Hormones Affect Our Skin
…stress can lead to cortisol dysregulation and a variety of effects that can change our skin such as: Altered sex hormone levels leading to increased sebum production and inflammatory skin…
…stress can lead to cortisol dysregulation and a variety of effects that can change our skin such as: Altered sex hormone levels leading to increased sebum production and inflammatory skin…
…environmental toxins, are considered “endocrine disruptors” and are thought to mimic female sex hormones. The study, Association of phthalates, parabens and phenols found in personal care products with pubertal timing…
…distress in late midlife may potentially increase the risk of dementia in later life. Despite adjusting for several other well-known risk factors for dementia, such as sex, marital status, lower…
…of addiction – sex, drugs, sugar. There is a key difference Self-control does seem to stay intact with social media use, as opposed to drug use. With drug addiction, the…
…technology can be used for the effective treatment of vaginal atrophy, dryness, soreness and pain during sex. For each woman the experience of the menopause is extremely personal however, it…
Razi Berry Combined cases of syphilis, gonorrhea, and chlamydia reached an all-time high in the United States in 2018, according to the annual Sexually Transmitted Disease Surveillance Report released today…
…couldn’t wrap my head around it. Yet he reports feeling better than he has in his 70+ years – great energy, reduced pain, strong sex drive…who could argue with that?…
…and 32 age and sex-matched non-using healthy controls. Participants were scanned during their performance of a Simon Spatial Incompatibility Task, a cognitive control task that requires resolving cognitive conflict to…
…consuming nuts once every two weeks. The connection was robust even after adjusting for factors that could influence the relationship such as age, sex, education, smoking, and physical activity. Nut…
…to influence prognosis such as body mass index, age, sex, smoking, education level, and blood pressure. People who were inactive in both 1984-1986 and 2006-2008 had a 2-fold higher likelihood…