At Teleios, Bioidentical Hormone Replacement Therapy (BHRT) is not just about symptom relief. It is about restoring balance, improving performance, and helping women feel like themselves again.
BHRT can be highly effective for addressing symptoms such as hot flashes, mood changes, fatigue, and weight shifts. However, like any therapy, there can be an adjustment period. The difference is not whether side effects occur. It is how precisely they are managed.
Every protocol at Teleios is tailored to the individual. Hormone levels, symptoms, lifestyle, and goals are all considered when building a plan.
This level of personalization is what allows us to:
Some women may experience:
These are typically not “failures” of therapy. They are signals that adjustments are needed.
The most important part of BHRT is not the initial prescription. It is the follow-up.
We encourage consistent communication so we can:
This is how optimization happens.
Hormones do not operate in isolation.
Nutrition, movement, sleep, and alcohol intake all impact how your body responds to therapy. We guide patients to:
These changes often reduce or eliminate mild side effects.
In some cases, targeted support can help improve outcomes.
This may include:
All supplementation should be aligned with your lab work and protocol, not taken blindly.
Stress directly impacts hormone balance.
Elevated cortisol can:
Simple, consistent practices such as walking, breathwork, and recovery time can significantly improve results.
For patients experiencing acne or skin changes, we evaluate:
Adjustments to your protocol are often the most effective solution, rather than masking symptoms topically.
BHRT is not a static treatment. It is a process of optimization.
At Teleios, we use:
to ensure your protocol evolves with you.
The goal is not just to reduce symptoms. It is to create stability, energy, and long-term health.
If you are experiencing side effects, it does not mean BHRT is not working. It usually means your protocol needs refinement.
With the right approach, these adjustments are expected, manageable, and often short-lived.