Estradiol
Cross-source consensus on Estradiol from 1 sources and 5 claims.
1 sources · 5 claims
How it works
Benefits
Comparisons
Highlighted claims
- Estradiol binds both estrogen alpha and beta receptors and is not associated with the inflammatory or cardiovascular effects of conjugated equine estrogens. — Menopause Hormone Therapy: Updated Evidence, Risk Reassessment, and Clinical Guidance
- Transdermal estradiol reliably improves hot flashes, vaginal dryness, and bone density. — Menopause Hormone Therapy: Updated Evidence, Risk Reassessment, and Clinical Guidance
- Conjugated equine estrogens bind primarily to estrogen beta receptors, increasing inflammatory markers, contributing to collagen breakdown, and promoting plaque destabilization. — Menopause Hormone Therapy: Updated Evidence, Risk Reassessment, and Clinical Guidance
- Estrogen use for as few as 5 years reduced ovarian, uterine, lung, and colorectal cancer by 33%. — Menopause Hormone Therapy: Updated Evidence, Risk Reassessment, and Clinical Guidance
- In the Medicare study, mortality reduction was greater with estradiol than with conjugated equine estrogens. — Menopause Hormone Therapy: Updated Evidence, Risk Reassessment, and Clinical Guidance