Bonza Health Blog
Gain the tools and understanding you need to help manage the challenges of perimenopause and beyond.
Women experiencing perimenopause or menopause can reclaim their health and vitality. At Bonza Health, we help women see hormone changes as a natural midlife transition and provide the doctor-backed information women need to navigate hormonal health conditions with confidence.
Check out our latest blog posts from our leading physician’s best tips and tools for easing hormonal symptoms, special announcements on our courses and services, and much more! Be a part of our ever-growing community of like-minded women who are thriving in health -- even with perimenopause or menopause conditions.
Your Gut, Neurotransmitters, and Perimenopause: What Every Woman Should Know
In our last blog, we discussed how the erratic estrogen fluctuations of perimenopause disrupt the production of serotonin and dopamine — two neurotransmitters essential for mood, motivation, sleep, and emotional well-being. The good news is that in addition to hormone therapy, there are evidence-based nutritional supplements that can support your body’s ability to produce these critical brain chemicals.
The Truth About Perimenopause and Your Mood
Last week, a patient sat in my office and told me a story I have heard far too many times. She was 42 years old. Over the past year, she had developed new-onset anxiety and depression that felt unlike anything she had experienced before. She went to four different doctors. Each one had a different recommendation. One said it was stress. Another prescribed an antidepressant. A third suggested therapy. Her gynecologist told her she was “too young” for hormonal changes and dismissed her concerns entirely. She asked every single one of them about her hormones. Not one took her seriously. Unfortunately, her story is not unique. It is the story of millions of women whose early perimenopausal hormonal shifts are dismissed, overlooked, or misattributed to life circumstances.
When Your Mind Feels Like a Stranger: The Neurobiology of Perimenopause and Mood
The anxiety, rage, and depression that arrive in perimenopause are not signs of a new psychiatric disorder—they are predictable neurobiological responses to hormonal change. Understanding the science is the first step toward effective treatment.