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One in three women will have a hysterectomy by age 60, but what happens after is rarely discussed. This episode breaks down how a hysterectomy affects hormones, weight, and digestion — from early menopause and insulin resistance to the gut-estrogen connection most doctors miss. Learn why your digestive health is the key to recovery and long-term wellness after a hysterectomy.
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5 KEY TAKEAWAYS
Early menopause is almost inevitable after a hysterectomy — Studies show that even a partial hysterectomy (ovaries left intact) nearly doubles the risk of early ovarian failure, meaning menopause can arrive years or even decades ahead of schedule.
Estrogen regulates insulin, so losing it drives weight gain — Estrogen and insulin work like a teeter-totter. When estrogen drops after a hysterectomy, insulin rises, leading to insulin resistance, pre-diabetic metabolic patterns, and stubborn weight gain that becomes increasingly difficult to reverse.
Your gut microbiome directly regulates estrogen — Gut bacteria contain enzymes (beta-glucuronidase) that play a key role in estrogen metabolism. A disrupted microbiome from antibiotics, processed foods, or sugar doesn't just cause bloating — it impairs estrogen regulation throughout the entire body.
The liver is where estrogen gets cleared from the body — Estrogen metabolism happens primarily in the liver through methylation and conjugation pathways. A fatty liver — which affects roughly one in three people — compromises the body's ability to break down and eliminate inflammatory estrogen, increasing cancer and metabolic risk.
Inflammatory estrogen drives fibroids, cancer risk, and the need for hysterectomies in the first place — Xenoestrogens and poorly metabolized estrogen create a cycle of inflammation that can lead to fibroids, endometriosis, and eventually hysterectomy. Supporting gut and liver health is the foundational strategy to break that cycle before and after surgery.
By NURSE DOZA4.8
8282 ratings
One in three women will have a hysterectomy by age 60, but what happens after is rarely discussed. This episode breaks down how a hysterectomy affects hormones, weight, and digestion — from early menopause and insulin resistance to the gut-estrogen connection most doctors miss. Learn why your digestive health is the key to recovery and long-term wellness after a hysterectomy.
FEATURED PRODUCT
JOIN THE SCHOOL
5 KEY TAKEAWAYS
Early menopause is almost inevitable after a hysterectomy — Studies show that even a partial hysterectomy (ovaries left intact) nearly doubles the risk of early ovarian failure, meaning menopause can arrive years or even decades ahead of schedule.
Estrogen regulates insulin, so losing it drives weight gain — Estrogen and insulin work like a teeter-totter. When estrogen drops after a hysterectomy, insulin rises, leading to insulin resistance, pre-diabetic metabolic patterns, and stubborn weight gain that becomes increasingly difficult to reverse.
Your gut microbiome directly regulates estrogen — Gut bacteria contain enzymes (beta-glucuronidase) that play a key role in estrogen metabolism. A disrupted microbiome from antibiotics, processed foods, or sugar doesn't just cause bloating — it impairs estrogen regulation throughout the entire body.
The liver is where estrogen gets cleared from the body — Estrogen metabolism happens primarily in the liver through methylation and conjugation pathways. A fatty liver — which affects roughly one in three people — compromises the body's ability to break down and eliminate inflammatory estrogen, increasing cancer and metabolic risk.
Inflammatory estrogen drives fibroids, cancer risk, and the need for hysterectomies in the first place — Xenoestrogens and poorly metabolized estrogen create a cycle of inflammation that can lead to fibroids, endometriosis, and eventually hysterectomy. Supporting gut and liver health is the foundational strategy to break that cycle before and after surgery.

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