Signs or symptoms of a hormonal imbalance
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Signs or symptoms of a hormonal imbalance
Your hormones play an integral role in your overall health. As a result, there’s a broad range of signs or symptoms that could signal a hormonal imbalance. Your signs or symptoms will depend on which hormones or glands aren’t working properly.
Common hormonal conditions affecting both men and women could cause any of the following signs or symptoms:
- Weight Gain: During a woman’s reproductive one of the years, estrogen hormones responsible for regulating menstruation and ovulation begin to decline. Once menopause occurs, estrogen is too low to induce menstruation.
- Sweating: Sweating is a bodily function that helps regulate your body temperature. Also called perspiration, sweating is the release of a salt-based fluid from your sweat glands. Changes in your body temperature, the outside temperature, or your emotional state can cause sweating. The most common areas of sweating on the body include:
- armpits
- face
- palms of the hands
- soles of the feet
- Dry Skin: Dry skin is an uncomfortable condition marked by scaling, itching, and cracking. It can occur for a variety of reasons. You might have naturally dry skin. But even if your skin tends to be oily, you can develop dry skin from time to time.Dry skin can affect any part of your body. It commonly affects hands, arms, and legs. In many lifestyle changes and over-the-counter moisturizers may be all you need to treat it. If those treatments aren’t enough, you should contact your doctor.
- Purple Stretch Marks: Stretch marks, also called striae, are scars that are associated with the skin being stretched and thinned, which causes the elastic fibers to break.
Typical causes of stretch marks include:
- rapid weight gain or loss
- pregnancy
- rapid growth, such as an adolescent growth spurt
- rapid muscle growth, such as a result of weight training
Stretch marks are also associated with long-term application of corticosteroids and with certain health conditions, such as Cushing’s disease and Marfan syndrome.
Darker colored stretch marks, such as purple ones, are typically newer. Without treatment, they’ll usually fade to white or silver over time.
Endocrinology and Metabolism: Open Access is a peer reviewed journal which focuses on the publication of current research and developments on the endocrine glands and its secretions with their coordination with metabolism and reproduction.
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