We are constantly on the go in this modern world. In terms of productivity, it’s a great thing to have mobile gadgets that enable us to work anywhere and anytime, but in the process, it’s too easy to forget about a more important aspect in life: our health, and how it affects our reproductive capabilities.
One major thing that affects our fertility health is hormonal balance, a critical factor in getting pregnant and carrying a healthy foetus to term. If you’ve never had symptoms of hormonal imbalance, it doesn’t mean you aren’t experiencing it now, as the onset of hormonal imbalance happens gradually.
Stress, poor diet and constant exposure to manufactured chemical particles all play a role in throwing our organs out of whack, and these are long-term issues. To improve, it is essential that you take the time to change your lifestyle and your mindset on health, as that is the only way to maintain a healthy hormone balance.
Types of hormones
Here’s a breakdown on the types of hormones you should know about:
• Steroid hormones
The body produces natural hormones known as steroid hormones. There are five categories of such hormones: androgen, oestrogen, progestin, mineralocorticoids and glucocorticoids.
Androgen and oestrogen play a role in sexual development and function; progestin moderates your menstrual cycle and pregnancy; mineralocorticoids regulates the kidney in expelling salt and water; and glucocorticoids influence carbohydrate, protein and lipid metabolism, as well as the capacity to cope with stress.
• Bioidentical hormones
Bioidentical hormones are copies of steroid hormones. They are derived from plants, minerals or animal sources, and are considered natural because of this.
These are commonly used for hormone replacement therapy (HRT), birth control and artificial reproductive technology (ART).
Hormones like oestrone, oestradiol, DHEA and progesterone are currently approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
However, bioidentical hormones are not approved in some countries.
• Synthetic hormones
These are synthetic hormones produced in a lab and are patented medications. They have a similar effect to our own endogenous hormones.
They are also used for HRT and ART. Birth control is the most common use of synthetic hormones.
The causes of imbalance
• Stress
Daily stress increases the levels of stress hormones such as cortisol, which inhibits the body’s main sex hormone, gonadotropin-releasing hormone. Subsequently, this suppresses ovulation, sexual activity and sperm count.
Chronic stress may lower libido, cause adrenal fatigue, thyroid problems and decrease fertility health.
• Poor nutrition
If you are not taking proper care of your diet and ensuring that you are getting the right amounts of vitamin, mineral and fluid levels, your body cannot function properly.
In addition, if you are eating foods that are unhealthy, full of preservatives, dyes and other human-made processed chemicals, you may be causing damage to your endocrine glands, which are closely connected to hormonal balance.
You also need clean filtered drinking water to sustain fluid levels and flush toxins out of your body.
• Xenohormones
Xenohormones are human-made chemicals that have the ability to interfere with the natural functions and development of our bodies. They get absorbed into our bodies via ingestion, inhalation and direct skin contact. All xenohormones are endocrine disruptors.
They interrupt the way natural hormones are produced, metabolised and eliminated, as they mimic our natural hormones and can block them from binding to receptor sites, and thus, weakening our systems.
Common sources of xenohormones include non-organic meats; birth control (pills, shots, rings and implants); solvents and adhesives like paint, nail polish and household cleaners; plastics; pesticides, herbicides and fungicides; emulsifiers in soap and cosmetics; and polychlorinated biphenyl (PCBs) from industrial waste.