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Four signs you may have a hormone imbalance and what you can do about it

Feeling a bit off? Dr Libby Weaver says this could be why.
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When we think of hormones, itโ€™s easy to think back to our teenage years when pimples were our biggest drama, or pregnancy when mood swings and cravings are out of control.

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But up until menopause, women have a daily relationship with their hormones, and while for some it can be relatively drama-free, for others, they can be a right pain.

We at Now To Love had a chat with Dr Libby Weaver, one of the countryโ€™s leading nutritional biochemists about the tell-tale signs you could have a hormone imbalance, and what you can do to help yourself.

1. Your skin is breaking out

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If youโ€™ve noticed a few pimples or if youโ€™re experiencing acne, it could be because of whatโ€™s going on inside. Dr Libby says that classic signs your sex hormones are out of balance include pimples along the jaw line or on your chest or back.

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โ€œAt puberty when sex hormone levels first increase, that increase is sebum production. So itโ€™s the elevation in the blood of the sex hormones that increases the release of sebum from the sebaceous gland,โ€ she says.

But as we have bacteria living all over us all the time, when you produce more sebum, it gives the bacteria more to feed on, so they then multiply in numbers.

โ€œThen we feel like our skin is a bit congested. Pimples or pustules could form or it just might feel a bit lumpy or little cysts might begin to appear,โ€ she adds.

READ MORE: THIS is why itโ€™s time to harness your hormones.

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2. Your hair is falling out

Have you noticed your part getting wider?

If youโ€™ve ever stood in the shower and thought about how much hair youโ€™re losing, that tends to be normal. But if youโ€™ve noticed that itโ€™s coming out in clumps or youโ€™ve noticed that the part in your hair has started to get wider, that can be a sign that your hairโ€™s starting to thin and youโ€™re losing it quicker than you can regrow it.

โ€œOne of the common hormone imbalances linked to that is when your prolactin levels are elevated,โ€ says Dr Libby.

โ€œProlactin is the sex hormone that we usually only make when weโ€™re breastfeeding but these days, more and more younger women are making it when theyโ€™re not pregnant or breastfeeding.

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โ€œWhen you have high levels of prolactin, it can lead to elevated levels of androgen which are male sex hormones and with that elevation in androgen, then comes that head hair loss so thatโ€™s another symptom that the sex hormones need looking at,โ€ she adds.

3. Your menstrual cycle is a mess

Scotland providing tampons and pads to those who canโ€™t afford them in bid to beat period poverty

Your irregular periods could be linked to a hormone imbalance.

20 per cent of Australian women suffer from polycycstic ovarian syndrome and one major symptom is irregular periods which means irregular ovulation. And when you ovulate irregularly, your progesterone levels are low.

โ€œProgesterone plays a role reproductively but it plays a lot of other biological roles: itโ€™s a very powerful anti-anxiety agent, itโ€™s an antidepressant and itโ€™s a diuretic so it allows us to get rid of excess fluid,โ€ says Dr Libby.

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โ€œSome women across the menstruation years donโ€™t make enough progesterone and then for others that kicks in at perimenopause when they stop ovulating regularly. Across those perimenopausal years, oestrogen tends to surge and then drop. When it surges you get really hot and irritated and when it drops your mood goes very low and of course one of the main symptoms for menopause these days is the hot flushes.โ€

READ MORE: 8 reasons why your period is late that arenโ€™t pregnancy.

4. You have skin pigmentation problems

Dark spots? It could be because of too much oestrogen.

Skin pigmentation issues can arise due to a number of reasons, whether thatโ€™s too much time in the sun or extreme stress. But quite often, itโ€™s due to an excessive amount of oestrogen and not enough progesterone.

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โ€œWomen might notice that they get some pigmentation when they go on The Pill or when their hormones are changing and their PMT might get worse, for example, and quite often thatโ€™s related to too much oestrogen,โ€ explains Dr Libby.

RELATED: Are hormones impacting your body shape?

How can we look after our hormone health?

So is this just a case of bad luck or is there something we can do to look after those chemicals buzzing around in our bodies?

Well Dr Libby says there are two things that can make a big impact.

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In Australia, less than 10 per cent of adults are eating their recommended five serves of vegetables every day and while itโ€™s a boring message, we need to eat a lot less junk food and eat our greens for good sex hormone balance and healthy liver function.

โ€œThe Brassica family of vegetables which include broccoli, cauliflower, kale and Brussel sprouts contain substances beyond their vitamins and minerals as they have phytochemicals in them that help to stimulate the part of the liver thatโ€™s needed to deal with oestrogen,โ€ she says.

Mum was right, eat your greens!

Another way to look after our hormones is to stress less, though of course thatโ€™s easier said than done. When humans roamed the earth thousands of years ago, our adrenaline levels would rise when our lives were in actual danger.

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โ€œThese days, most of our stress is psychological so when we produce adrenaline, the body hasnโ€™t yet learned to discern the adrenaline that we make when our life is literally in danger and the adrenaline that we make because of our perception of pressure and emergency related to our to-do list, our email inbox or running late or worrying about what other people think of us,โ€ explains Dr Libby.

One top tip for managing your stress, though, as easy as it sounds, is to practice breathing diaphragmatically.

โ€œWhen you do your yoga breathing it communicates to your body that youโ€™re safe because youโ€™d never be able to breathe like that if your life was truly in danger. So when you breathe diaphragmatically it lowers stress hormones more effectively than just about anything.โ€

As always, if you think you have a hormone imbalance or any other medical problem, speak to your GP.

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If you want to learn more about happy hormones, Dr Libby is speaking in Sydney on Tuesday October 30. Grab your tickets here.

Meghan Markle

If itโ€™s good enough for Meghan, weโ€™ll give yoga a try!

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