ZOE Science & Nutrition - How to track your menopause symptoms | Dr. Sarah Berry and Tamsen Fadal
Episode Date: December 5, 2024Most women will recognize one or two symptoms of menopause - the infamous hot flashes or weight gain. But there’s also brittle nails, tingling in your hands and changes to your taste buds. In fact, ...there are more than 50 symptoms of menopause. Today’s guest, Tamsen Fadal, found out she was in menopause while on live TV. Tamsen is an Emmy award winning journalist and executive producer of the documentary “The M Factor: Shredding the Silence on Menopause”. She’s got a new book titled “How to Menopause”. Tamsen is joined by Dr. Sarah Berry. Sarah runs the world’s largest study on nutrition and menopause here at ZOE. She developed a free tool called the MenoScale calculator that helps you track your symptoms so you can find relief. Sarah is a world leader in large-scale human nutritional studies, associate professor in nutrition at King’s College London and Chief Scientist at ZOE. 🥑 Make smarter food choices. Become a member at zoe.com - 10% off with code PODCAST 🌱 Try our new plant based wholefood supplement - Daily 30+ Follow ZOE on Instagram. Timecodes 00:00 34 symptoms of menopause 01:50 Quick fire questions 03:48 A scary moment on live TV 07:25 Feeling shame in menopause 08:20 What’s happening to your hormones? 12:40 12 months without a period 14:01 How long do symptoms last? 15:31 New science on symptoms 24:40 How estrogen changes fat distribution 29:10 Gut microbiome and menopause 36:00 Menopause symptoms in the workplace 48:18 Easy menopause food hacks 51:50 Brand new symptom tracker 📚Books by our ZOE Scientists The Food For Life Cookbook Every Body Should Know This by Dr Federica Amati Food For Life by Prof. Tim Spector Free resources from ZOE Live Healthier: Top 10 Tips From ZOE Science & Nutrition Gut Guide - For a Healthier Microbiome in Weeks Mentioned in today's episode ZOE Studies on Menopause: abstracts Menopause: Introducing a new way to understand your experience Have feedback or a topic you'd like us to cover? Let us know here. Episode transcripts are available here.
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Welcome to ZOE Science and Nutrition, where world-leading scientists explain how their research can improve your health.
Most women recognise one or two menopause symptoms.
The infamous hot flashes, or perhaps night sweats.
But there are many more.
Tingling in your hands, brittle fingernails,
changes to your taste buds, the list goes on.
In fact, there are more than 50 symptoms,
and just one of these could suggest
that it's menopause that's knocking at your door.
Today's guests found out that she was in menopause
while she was live on TV,
and it's been a long road since that day
that threatened to derail her health and her career.
Emmy award-winning journalist, Tamsin Fadal,
interviewed 42 experts for her new book, How to Menopause,
and is executive producer of the documentary, The M Factor,
shredding the silence on menopause.
Tamsin is joined by Professor Sarah Berry.
Sarah's a professor in nutrition at King's College London
and runs the world's largest study on nutrition
and menopause here at ZOE.
She's developed a free tool called the Menascale Calculator
that helps you track your symptoms so you can find relief.
And today, she's sharing an exciting new breakthrough
about how gut health impacts on menopause.
Today's episode will help you track and treat your symptoms so you can take control of your
health.
Tamsen and Sarah, thank you so much for joining me today.
Thank you.
Great to be here.
So Tamsen, we have a tradition here at Zoey where we always start with a quick fire round
of questions.
Oh, boy. Here at Zoe where we always start with a quick fire round of questions. Oh boy We're some very strict rules
You can say yes or no or a one-sentence answer if you absolutely have to okay, you're willing to give it a go
I'm willing I'm willing to give it a go once your menopause symptoms began. Did you feel prepared?
Not at all our workplace is supporting women who are going through menopause
Not enough.
Sarah, is there a simple medical test that diagnoses perimenopause?
No.
Have you developed a new tool for women to be able to make sense of their symptoms?
Yes.
Can the right changes in nutrition help with symptoms of menopause?
Yes.
Tamsin, what is it that you wish you knew earlier
about menopause?
I wish that I knew that there was support out there
and there were some answers and that I wasn't alone.
I think that's really powerful.
And actually, this idea of being alone, I mean,
it's very strong.
I'm really excited you're here.
And for listeners around the globe who may not know you
so well, you're one of America's most beloved news anchors.
You covered Hurricane Sandy, the war in Afghanistan,
and recently you've been covering this topic
that we're going to talk about today, which is menopause.
And your new book, How to Menopause,
based on interviews with dozens of experts,
really aims to break the taboo about this topic.
And you've also found fame globally with your viral video
about 34 symptoms of
menopause, a number that is staggeringly high. And yet I think today that Sarah is going
to say she's found even more. So, Tamsen, I'd like to start with your own experience.
Could you tell us about the moment that you suspected you were entering menopause?
Yeah. You know, I had been, if I look back, dealing with a lot of symptoms of it,
though I wasn't aware of it.
I was a news anchor for about 30 years.
In the last year or so, before I realized what was going on,
I would have a hard time.
I'd look at a word on the teleprompter,
not be able to say the word, not know
exactly what was happening.
And I just thought, stress, I'm tired.
I don't know what's happening.
One night, it was November of 2019,
and I was on the
news desk, and we did live newscasts every night in New York City. And we were on a commercial break, and we were all talking and everything was fine. And all of a sudden, I felt this eruption from
inside of my whole, everything broke down into a sweat. And my heart was just beating, beating,
being fast. I could hear it in my ears. And I thought, I don't know what is happening, but I'm
not going to make it through this next round of news.
And I said kind of jokingly, because I was in a studio of all men, if I fall over, somebody
catch me.
And I was a little uncertain.
I wanted to feel like you're in control on live television.
And I knew I wasn't going to be shortly.
So one of my coworkers walked me off and I walked into the bathroom with him and dropped
to the bathroom floor just to cool my body down and calm myself down.
I got up 15 minutes later,
not something anybody in the right mind would do is get on
the bathroom floor in a newsroom and left the studio.
That following week proceeded to go to
my doctors to see what was happening.
I went to one doctor after another because I didn't know it was menopause.
At that time, I just knew I wasn't right, something was happening.
Wow. That's a really intense and shocking story. I always feel whenever I hear any of
these stories, I think particularly as a man, it's sort of amazing because this is not something
that anyone ever talked about with me until really the last few years, sounds pretty terrible.
You know what's interesting is that the guy that walked me into the bathroom, he said,
I thought you were having some kind of heart episode.
I didn't know what was going on, but I just knew that something wasn't right.
And since then, we've talked quite a bit.
And now I hear men asking these questions to talk about it.
But yeah, it was terrifying because I wasn't in control anymore.
And I didn't know what was going on.
When you lack answers and you can't go forward with knowing what you're
dealing with to try to find a solution,
I think that's the terrifying part.
Were you prepared for the fact that there was going to be an onset of symptoms
and it's just that you were surprised that this happened now?
I'll be honest. Not too long later,
I got a message in my patient portal from my doctor. I'd gone through, I'd gone to my OBGYN, I did blood tests, not too long later, I got a message in my patient portal from my doctor.
I'd gone to my OBGYN,
I did blood tests, endocrinologist,
I found a functional medicine doctor,
and the message in the patient portal from
the doctor said, in menopause, any questions?
I was in the airport at the time with my now husband,
and I looked and I was like,
I'm too young for menopause.
I was 49, beyond the average age of menopause. And so I had no idea,
cause all I had ever seen were kind of media ha ha's
about hot flashes and joking about it and women sweating.
And I didn't know very much else about it.
So I was stunned to find those symptoms
that I think some are very, you know,
uncommon to women, they just don't know about.
And then there's the common ones,
you don't realize how debilitating those are.
And do you think your story is unusual or
are most women not prepared for this?
Well, that's what I thought was so strange.
I was like, I have this unique story.
And then I went and I started
talking to one woman after another and I went,
this is not unique at all.
This is common and all of us are in the same boat.
And I think that's really what moved me
forward with this purpose because I realized
that there was such information lacking.
I tell stories my whole life and I never talked about this.
I never saw the word perimenopause on television.
We talked about diets, we talked about exercise,
we talked about the latest fads and drinking green tea.
We never talked about this.
Why is that?
I ask myself that question a lot.
I think there's a shame in a lot of ways of feeling not as productive anymore after your
reproductive years have come to an end.
I think maybe there's the shame that's wrapped up in aging and feeling not as useful once
you hit this time in life.
And I think that a lot of women feel
like, like, my life is kind of over when I hit menopause. And that's a really sad thing because
that's just not true. As Zoe's chief scientist, I wanted to talk about something that's not talked
about. Menopause symptoms. Over half of people on the planet experience perimenopause and menopause,
people on the planet experience perimenopause and menopause, yet symptoms are often misunderstood or dismissed. Zoe's new Menoscale Calculator lets you score your menopause symptoms. Your Menoscale
score may help you make sense of what you're experiencing. Personally, as a woman experiencing
perimenopause, it's a key talking point with my friends, and now we have a score that we can share with each other. To me, this calculator is a game changer.
At ZOE, we're moving menopause research forward. We recently conducted the largest
research analysis of menopause and nutrition in the world. In our research, participants
reported an overwhelming number of symptoms. Sixty-six percent of perimenopausal women reported experiencing over 12 symptoms,
like weight gain, memory problems and fatigue. The good news is our research shows that changing
our food habits may reduce the chance of having a particular menopause symptom by up to 37% for some
women. The Menoscale Calculator puts our science in your hands. Go to zoe.com forward slash
Menoscale to get your score. The calculator is free and only takes a couple of minutes.
As we scientists say, if you can't measure it, you can't change it. All right, back to
the show.
Well, first I'm going to say thank you for sharing the story. It's like very raw and
powerful. I'd love Sarah, if maybe you could sharing the story. It's like very raw and powerful.
I'd love, Sarah, if maybe you could try and explain a little bit what might have been happening,
like what's going on in the body leading up to menopause? How could you have such a terrible experience?
Well, I think firstly, before we even talk about the biology, I think it's because we don't talk about it.
We are of the same generation, Tamsin and I, where our parents didn't talk about it,
the generation before that didn't talk about it, so we are unprepared.
And that's what I think is fantastic about the kind of things we're doing at Zoë and
that you're doing, that I hope my daughter's generation will be ready for it.
Because I think if you're ready for it, there's lots that you can do to prepare yourself
for it.
So what happens is that as you enter the menopause transition, which is what we call a perimenopause,
you start to have a decrease in the hormone estrogen.
Now you don't go to bed one day where you're pre-menopausal and you wake up the next day
and, hey, I'm post-menopausal, that's it, the menopause is done.
We know that on average people become post-menopausal at the age of 51 and basically all that means
is that it's one year post their last menstrual cycle, so post their last period.
But there's this whole transition period.
There's this transition period that can last for some women up to 10 years, although typically
it's between like two to four to five years.
And during this transition period, you don't again have this nice, slow, lovely decline
in estrogen that your body adjusts to.
You have this roller coaster.
It's like this state of just like craziness in your hormones.
So it's like hormonal chaos, I often think of it like, where your estrogen's going up
and down from day to day, from hour to hour.
And so you're dealing with firstly a reduction in estrogen, but you're also dealing with
this roller coaster in estrogen.
And the reason that has such wide reaching effects, so you talked about 34 symptoms,
and we know it's even greater than that, you know, it can be 50 and beyond in terms of
number of symptoms.
The reason it has such a big impact on so many different areas is because we have estrogen receptors all over our body.
Our brain is full of estrogen receptors.
Everywhere in our body has estrogen receptors.
Nearly every cell has an estrogen receptor.
And so if your estrogen is declining,
it's gonna impact everything from our brain
to our cardiovascular health, to our bone health,
to our muscle health.
And it's gonna to cause, therefore, all of these really unpleasant symptoms that we talk
about often to do with menopause.
Now it will differ from woman to woman what symptoms they have.
It will differ from woman to woman how impactful they are on their quality of life.
And it will also differ day to day.
And I think this is really, really key with the research that we're doing.
Yes, we know on average 99.8% of women in our Zoey cohort say that they have experienced at least one symptom.
66% of women in our Zoey cohort say that they've had 12 or more symptoms.
12 or more symptoms.
On average perimenopausal women in our ZoE cohort say that they have 13 and a half symptoms
out of 20 that we're measuring.
For postmenopausal, it's a little bit lower, it's 10, but that's still huge.
But they vary day to day.
And I think what's most interesting, and it's interesting listening to your story about
what suddenly kind of made you like wake up and almost go, whoa, what's going on, was that hot flash that you had.
And actually that's what typically women think,
okay, I must be in the menopause
because I've had a hot flush.
That's actually one of the least common symptoms.
So from our ZO predict data,
we know about 45% of women that will experience hot flashes.
So Sarah, you could go through menopause
and never have hot flashes, that's possible?
That's possible.
And some women, and what I hear a lot is what you've said, Tamsin,
and this is what I experienced. I had one like overwhelming hot flash. I remember when
it happened, it was just before Christmas. I was on the floor in the lounge, wrapping
my kids' presents. And it was like, oh my God, what on earth is going on? I thought
maybe I'm going to faint. Am I going to collapse? What is it? Never had them since. But what
I've had is all of these other symptoms.
And these are the symptoms that we know from our own data are so common.
So Tamsen, I bet it would have been really great to have had
this little medical explainer from Sarah
before you ended up in the bathroom floor of the studio.
Yes. Where have you been all my life?
It's interesting because we talk about this and you look back, I mean, I looked
back and I'll say this because I thought to myself, wow, 12 months without a period and
I did go through up, down a lot of, you know, a heavy period, crazy heavy period, none for
four months.
But I had endometrium polyps, which is another thing to add on top of this, which didn't give me that defined marker of,
oh, I haven't had what seemed like a period for 12 months.
So I didn't even know that was a thing either.
I didn't know that you go 12 months without a period
and that's menopause.
But if I look back at those transitional years now,
I was gaining weight.
I had gone to see a doctor because I was having anxiety.
I was put on antidepressants.
I had dealt with a lot of these other symptoms, I'd gone to see a doctor because I was having anxiety. I was put on antidepressants.
I had dealt with a lot of these other symptoms,
the brain fog, the irritation with the brain fog,
the lack of word retention.
So I just didn't know that that's what it was.
I attributed to everything else.
It's stress, it's difficult at work,
I'm not sleeping well,
weight looks different on my body now.
So I just didn't know what I didn't know.
That would have been really helpful
to have just some indication.
You're describing these symptoms
before you actually hit the point
where you'd have no periods and you're on the floor.
I played whack-a-mole with them.
No sleep, feeling anxiety, gotta work out harder,
gotta eat better.
And I just didn't know looking back
that that was what is perimenopause.
I didn't even have the word.
And how did your symptoms progress after that day on the bathroom floor?
You know, they were still bad for about a year plus. I lost my mom to breast cancer
when she was young and I was young. And that was always something that I was paying attention
to. I wasn't thinking about anything else, certainly not menopause. So when I did finally go to a doctor and say like, I've got to do something because
I'm not functioning, like I wasn't myself. And I was having most of mine where I feel like more
anxiety issues, a lot of anxiety and physical in terms of weight. And so my doctor said, well,
you can do hormone therapy. I think that you're eligible for it. I'm not quite sure because you
had a mom with breast cancer, we don't know.
So I went to a doctor that wasn't so sure, then I found another doctor that felt very
confident and cleared up a lot of misinformation there is about hormone therapy.
So I was given hormones and when I went on that, it was about six months and I started
to like see the light again, the fog had kind of cleared.
But I had a rough go of those symptoms for a bit after that happened in the studio.
Again, whenever I hear these stories, I'm always shocked that there's these sort of two parts to it, Sarah,
with all these symptoms that start and you really have no idea where they're coming from
because there's no like test that just says, oh, you're in perimenopause in the way that, you know,
I feel like we're used to like a blood test for everything.
And then there are these symptoms also in menopause.
Sarah, could you tell us about this sort of new research
you've been doing about menopause symptoms, like how many there are?
And in particular, you just mentioned that it's not just night sweats and hot flashes.
What are the other symptoms that actually you are seeing are frequent?
Yeah, Jonathan. So we've been researching menopause symptoms,
but also how menopause impacts our health.
And this is really important to specify because often we think about menopause
and we think because there's a lot more voices out there talking about symptoms,
we forget that it also impacts our health, impacts our blood cholesterol,
impacts our blood lipids, it impacts our blood cholesterol, it impacts our blood lipids, it impacts our
blood pressure and so much more. So we've actually been doing, looking at menopause
across two areas. We've been looking firstly how it impacts our health in terms of disease
risk and then how it impacts our symptoms. So these very kind of burdensome symptoms
impact our quality of life. So the research that we've been doing looking at the relationship between symptoms and diet and lifestyle and many other exposures, we've had
over 70,000 individuals who were taking part in our Zoey Predict study, which is part of this huge
program of work that we're doing at Zoey. It's the world's largest nutrition research program and we have studied 70,000 females, half of who are perimenopausal and half of
who are postmenopausal. And this is really important because there is some growing research
in the area of postmenopause, but actually generally you're either asked, are you pre
or are you post? So what we're really proud about is the work we're doing in the perimenopausal group. And this makes up about 35,000 of those
individuals. And we've been asking these individuals lots of questions about their symptoms, how
many symptoms they have, how impactful their symptoms are on their quality of life, because
that's really important. Like Tamsin said, 10% of women leave their job because of their
symptoms. And then we've also been following these individuals up
after they might make diet or lifestyle changes.
But in this first body of research
where in these 70,000 individuals,
we asked them about their number of symptoms
and the impact that they have on their quality of life.
It was amazing just how many people reported having symptoms.
We know that there's loads more than 20 symptoms.
There's up to 50 and beyond, but we've asked individuals about what we know from our own research are
the 20 most common symptoms. And what we found really surprisingly is that actually the ones
that we typically think of when we think of menopause, say the hot flushes, the night
sweats, were the least common. Only about 45% of the women reported having these hot flushes,
these night sweats. And yet symptoms that the more we talk to individuals we realize they talk about don't
know a part of menopause, these are the ones that are most common.
Sleep disturbances, more than 80 percent of individuals have these.
Memory loss, brain fog, irritability, anxiety, depression, low libido, weight gain, slowed metabolism. More than 80% of individuals
reported having each of those different symptoms in the perimenopause. Postmenopausally, it
was lower, but there was still a high proportion of women that had those symptoms. You were
still talking in the range of 50 to 60%. And I think this is important because I think
often we think, oh, it's just during that transition period you have these bothersome symptoms, suck it up, get on with it.
After the menopause is over, it's fine.
They reduce.
Yes, we do see for every year post-menopause, your symptoms go down.
And this is really exciting research actually that we haven't published yet, Jonathan, but
we've looked at the number of symptoms and how they go down per year past the menopause.
They reduce, but even 10 years post menopause, so post that last period, you still have a
big burden for menopause symptoms.
And so this is why it's so important not to just think about it as the perimenopausal
phase, but also realize this is something that's going to impact you for quite a number
of years. Why is it that the symptoms reduce over time in menopause? What's going on that it's not just
sort of like constant from the point of menopause? So I don't think we fully understand that yet.
What we do know is during the perimenopausal phase, the reason that they're so impactful
on your quality of life is because of this roller coaster, like you've just explained. Also, our body hasn't adapted yet. Our bodies are really,
really clever. There's things like during the perimenopause, they're not quite clever
enough at adapting, but we do adapt. We adapt to changes in the nutrients we're exposed
to, the environment outside. We adapt to our internal environment as well. So our body
over time adapts to this reduction in estrogen.
But also postmenopause, it becomes more stable.
So you're not having this kind of roller coaster as well.
We know at ZOE, because this is what we spend all of our time studying,
that there's no one size fits all, that we all respond so differently
to every kind of exposure that is put upon us.
And so we do know that there are some women
that will sail through it. There are some women that will say they sail through it because
particularly I think our parents' generation, it's the generation you had grit, you sucked
it up. Of course you didn't moan about it. Like you don't moan about having menstrual
cramps. You don't moan about having your periods, any of that. But I hope that my daughter, well, she's 14 and so she's self-absorbed at the moment. But, you know, I hope that when
it's her time as well to go through the menopause that she has a very different experience. And I
believe she will because of the kind of research we're doing, but because of the kind of voice that
people like Tamsin have as well. It's sort of clear from the research that Sarah says, like,
this is a really big deal. And so to not talk about it at all seems mad. And I find it very hard to believe that if we men had
all been going through this, that like we never would have talked about it. So, you know, I think
it's fantastic that it's starting to be talked about. It's also amazing how little study there's
been, right? It's amazing, Sarah, that this is the first data that's actually
understanding this at any scale.
And I think, Jonathan, it's really important as well to talk about the
increased disease risk that happens with menopause, because this isn't talked
about much, and I think it's great we're getting a bigger voice in terms of the
symptoms, but actually when you enter the perimenopausal phase and when you become
postmenopausal,
suddenly your risk of disease increases.
Women need to be aware of this because what is good about that is there's a lot you can
do related to diet and related to lifestyle to reduce this.
We published a research, in a couple of years ago, in eBioMedicine on the first large-scale
study looking at how peri- and post-menopause impacts many
intermediary risk factors related to disease.
So by this I mean things like blood pressure, blood lipids, insulin sensitivity, glucose,
inflammation, body fat, and so much more.
And what we found was that for all of these kind of health risk factors, should we call
them,
up until the menopause, women are doing really well. It's the one time we're beating men at this. We've got lower blood pressure. We've got, on average, we've got lower blood cholesterol. We've
got lower visceral fat, so the fat around the tummy. We have better insulin sensitivity. We have
lower inflammation. We reached the perimenopausal phase and suddenly this nice little, imagine a figure and you
see you're going up kind of year by year but way below men, suddenly wham, it goes up.
And in some instances, for example, with blood pressure, you actually even overtake men,
your blood pressure becomes even worse than men of that age.
For the other factors then you become more
at the same risk of man, so your blood pressure is increasing, your glucose, your insulin,
your inflammation. We see huge increases in inflammation and we know this is really related
as well, or we believe there's evidence emerging it might be related to some of the symptoms
and the neurological symptoms. And so it's a real point in time where I think women,
as well as thinking how they can handle
their symptoms, need to be really mindful about, okay, I'm now at increased risk of
cardiovascular disease, of type 2 diabetes, of obesity-related illnesses, which then link
in with cancer as well.
And this is where I think diet and lifestyle becomes so, so important as well.
I do too.
And I was, you know, it's funny, I went to the doctor and I had increased cholesterol.
I had low cholesterol my whole life.
I was shocked.
I'm not running around eating cheese and drinking.
I wasn't doing something that would cause that.
And then I learned, after all these years of paying attention to this, I learned that
as well.
So it's really shocking.
But I do think people want to know what to do
so they can kind of have some type of control.
And I think eating is the one place
that you actually can try to take some of your control back
and do something about it early on.
Yeah, and I think this is where we can use lifestyle
to reduce risk, but at the same time,
something I think we also need to be mindful of
is about being kind to ourselves. So what we know is that with the change in estrogen levels, where
you deposit the fat on your body changes. So in simple terms, estrogen kind of directs
the fat to your hips. So you think of pear shaped women. Once you become a pair in postmenopausal
women with a reduction in estrogen, then the fat is directed around your tummy,
which is where it typically is directed with men.
So it's a scientific fact, is what you're saying,
as you go into perimenopause,
suddenly your weight is going to change where it gets put
and you are going to put weight on around your stomach
in a way that you just didn't before that.
And that's not because you suddenly changed,
it's because your body has changed on you.
Absolutely and this is why I think we need to be kind because it's biologically what's happening.
It's because estrogen, in simple terms, is directing the fat or the lack of estrogen to be around your tummy.
The fat around your tummy is what we call visceral fat.
We know this is very metabolically active, it's not healthy for us.
That's why you have this increase in cholesterolically active. It's not healthy for us. That's why
you have this increase in cholesterol, in inflammation, in blood pressure, for example, peri- and
post-menopause because of that increased fat there. But the reason I'm saying it in the
respect of we need to be kind to ourselves, I've suddenly got fat. I might be slim elsewhere,
but I'm not comfortable wearing a bikini. Now, I recognize that it's just a natural part of menopause. And yes,
I'm going to work hard to be healthy. But I think it's recognizing that, look, we can't
have that six pack necessarily. I mean, maybe some women can, but I don't want to live such
a virtuous life that I have no pleasures to get to anymore. But it's recognizing that
there's some things we can help with diet, with lifestyle, with
hormone therapy if that's our choice. But there's also some things, let's just
accept it as part of aging. You know, aging can be a beautiful part of how we
change as well.
Thank you, Sarah. I'd like to ask the question that you teased to me before the
show starts about gut health and menopause, because I think,
oh, I know that my gut health is really important for my health in general, but
surely it has got nothing to do with menopause because that's all to do with
estrogen, that's something completely different, isn't there? It's sort of what I
was thinking until five minutes ago, so tell me Sarah.
So I will remind you of some data we've already published. And then I shall tell you about some new data that Tamsin, I have
whispered to her already.
So I'm sorry, Jonathan, that you're hearing with a second hand.
I feel like you've cheated on me, Sarah.
I know, I do feel a bit like that.
So we know from some research that we published a couple of years ago,
where in our ZOE Predict cohort of a thousand individuals who we
really deeply phenotype.
So we studied loads and loads of different aspects
related to menopause and health.
We know that peri and postmenopausal women
have a different microbiome composition
to premenopausal women,
which I think was really fascinating.
And this is even after we adjust for different confounders,
like is it to do with their diet or what else is going on?
We also looked in that data set to see,
is the microbiome why we're seeing some of these changes
that I talked about related to health,
the increased inflammation, the increased belly fat, et cetera.
And really interestingly, we found that there were some
species that were particularly elevated in the perian postmenopausal women. And these were species that we had previously
identified through a huge body of research that we'd done a few years before that. So
we're looking at the relationship between the microbiome and health. These were species
that we identified to be associated with inflammation with higher blood pressure, higher blood cholesterol,
and all of these kind of disease risk factors.
And we found that there was one species in particular that was quite elevated in peri- and
postmenopausal women, which is associated with an increase in inflammation.
And we saw a huge increase in inflammation and also what we call postprandial inflammation,
i.e. when you have a high carb, a high fat meal, you do have an increase in inflammation.
It's a normal part of having a meal, but if it's excessive and repeated, we know that it increases
our risk of chronic disease. So we saw that particular species was increased.
Sarah, can I just check I've got that? Because we often talk about the fact that the latest
research from ZOE has identified that there's sort of 50 bad bugs that can be, you know, in your gut,
Tamsin, and also these 50 good bugs. And are you saying that basically that one of those particular
bad bugs suddenly you're getting lots more of as you're going through perimenopause?
Yeah, so we saw that on average there was a greater number of what you call bad bugs. Any
microbiologists would hate that term,
but I think it's a good term to summarize it simply.
We see that there's an increase in these bad bugs,
postmenopause versus premenopause,
and in particular, the bug that's associated
with increased inflammation.
So this is research we've already published,
we published this a few years ago.
Some hot off the press research,
and I even had a latest update yesterday
afternoon on this research, is that we have found that the microbiome, so the composition
of the microbiome, is related to menopause symptoms. This hasn't been looked at in humans
before. We have data now on this 70,000 cohort. This is phenomenal.
70,000 peri- and post-menopausal women that we also
have microbiome analysis from their poop or poop.
We can look at how is the microbiome composition related to
the number of symptoms, the severity of
symptoms, and different types of symptoms.
What's really interesting is we see a really strong relationship to the makeup
of the microbiome and how many symptoms you have.
And we can do a particular kind of analysis that our genius team at Tamsin at Trento University,
who are world leaders in this area, they do this analysis.
It kind of blows my mind.
I don't quite understand what they do, so Jonathan, don't ask me in depth what they do. But they can work out how predictive is
your microbiome composition to a particular outcome. So they do this analysis to say,
can we predict the number of symptoms that you have based on the bugs, the species, the
microbiome that you have? And they can predict with reasonable accuracy using the microbiome how many symptoms
you will have, so how burdensome the menopause is. Is it that diet is impacting the symptoms
independent of the microbiome or is it that diet is impacting the microbiome that's impacting
the symptoms? My feeling based on the results that I've seen because they've done some
more other complex stuff that again goes a little bit over my head is that there's a little bit of both
going on. That diet is directly impacting symptoms through various mechanisms, but that
there might also be this mediating effect of the microbiome. And then the new results
that I saw yesterday when we tried to look at different types of symptoms was that the
symptoms that the microbiome had the strongest
relationship with was the psychological symptoms.
And I think that's really fascinating because this is what we're starting to see when we
think about food as well and psychological symptoms.
So by this, I mean things like depression, anxiety, low mood, irritability, memory loss, brain fog.
And they have a strong association.
So I think this just really hammers home the importance of eating to feed our microbiome,
but also eating based on our understanding that certain foods or a whole diatropetam can improve
the symptom burden that we experience.
The show you're listening to right now that's providing you the latest evidence-based health
and nutrition information from the world's top scientists, well, making it takes a lot of time.
We think it's well worth it, all in the name of improving your health.
All we ask in return is this, send a link to this podcast to someone you think would benefit.
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Okay, let's get back to the show.
This latest research shows there is actually a relationship between like all those trillions of bacteria in your gut,
this gut microbiome and your menopause symptoms. Is that right, Sarah?
That's correct. And what we need to go on to do, which we can do with our data,
so in a few months, hopefully we'll have those results, we need to see, is it
causal? And what I mean by that is if we use diet to change the microbiome,
does changing the microbiome change some of these symptoms?
And we have this gold mine of data
that I'm always talking about, I know,
that will enable us to look at this.
I want to start talking just a minute about, like,
actual advice about what women can do.
But just before that, Tams, I really
wanted to pick up on a thread that you talked about earlier.
I don't want to bounce over it, because it sounds like your symptoms really impacted your career.
You know, you were lying on the bathroom floor instead of actually being reading the news. That's pretty dramatic.
How unique is your story?
It's interesting. When I started going into all this research, I was like, I don't know.
You know, because there was no place to find information.
You can go online, you can find whatever you want in a lot of different areas.
I think that's what a lot of women do and it becomes very scary.
But I realized that my situation is not unique at all.
I have a community of people that I talk to online constantly and I hear one story after
another way worse than what I went through trying to do all sorts of things to remedy
symptoms, understand symptoms, figure out where they are, understand what perimenopause
means versus menopause versus postmenopause.
So I don't think unique, it did impact my career.
It wasn't the reason that I stepped away, but it was the reason I stepped away.
The reason is because I just feel like there's a much larger story here to tell because we
don't continue talking about this and we don't continue helping.
We don't help that younger generation coming up and we're going to just keep repeating this cycle.
And I think in some ways I do get sad that I wasn't here for my mother doing it.
And I want to make sure that somebody else that comes up behind me does never have that feeling again.
As a result of like this not being in play, are there a lot of women whose careers are being
impacted right now? Yeah, I think we're seeing a lot of that. We're seeing a lot of women,
there's statistics that have come out and there's a lot of different surveys that are being done
saying that a number of women are leaving the workplace or not looking to be promoted within
the workplace because they're not feeling like they can balance or juggle some of those symptoms. And that bothers me too because we're staying in the workplace because they're not feeling like they can, you know, balance or juggle some of those symptoms.
And that bothers me too, because we're staying in the workplace longer now, right?
Women are at the, you know, the prime of many of their careers.
They deserve to be where they have worked so hard to get.
And I think we owe it to ourselves to try to help them be able to stay and maintain
and go for promotions and not walk away from a job or career they've
been working so hard for because of symptoms that we're learning more about.
It's a pretty critical point, isn't it?
I mean, it's basically my age and your late 40s, like, you've got very good at whatever
you're doing at this point.
And that's just the point that you're saying, like, instead of you're sort of having to
potentially having to pull back because you're not being able to keep this under control.
I think it's just another aspect, right, along with the personal symptoms that you've been describing Sarah and the health impact.
Yeah, I think I always refer to the statistic that we have in the UK,
that 10% of women have left their job, they say, due to menopause.
But I've never actually thought about the point that you just made,
that actually, as well as people leaving, what about the people that stay,
that aren't going for promotion, that aren't progressing their career?
And I actually see that when I think of a lot of my friends.
I'm 47, so lots of my friends as well are going through the menopause.
And for a lot of them, it's their most insecure point of time in their life.
And so they wouldn't be going either for that promotion yet.
They've worked so hard and are so capable.
And so yeah, it's interesting you say that because it's just something that hadn't occurred to
me. Yeah, it's real disturbing, right, though,
because you know how hard they work to get to where they are. And I think that, you know,
when you asked about the symptoms earlier and what I really saw, you know, after I had
that incident, I think it was a real lack of confidence that I had. You know, I was a news
reader, but then also you are talking all the time and to not feel like
I could complete a sentence or retain a word or I would get lost in a string of thought
didn't give me that confidence. And so I've talked to so many women that say like, whether
they lost their train of thought in the middle of a presentation or they felt like they had
that massive hot flash in a room full of men or a board room, it can be really, really difficult.
It can really just knock your confidence. And so those stories are not unique ones.
I want to say again, thank you both for sharing. I think that just the sharing is very powerful
in terms of, I think not just women hearing about this who maybe haven't gone through
this, but I also think that for men to even be aware, this is really a thing.
It's a thing.
As I said, I literally didn't know it was a thing a couple of years ago.
And I don't think I'm the only man in that situation.
I'd love to transition now into actionable advice that women can
take to alleviate their symptoms.
And actually, Tamsen, can I start with you?
Because in your book, How to Menopause, you pull together a lot of stories and
strategies to help women going through menopause.
And I'd love to hear about one or two.
And I think one of the things you talk about, for example,
is the best sleep of your life.
And I know that sleep is one of the things, Sarah,
that you mentioned is a very common symptom
that's a problem.
Can you share?
Yeah.
You know, when I was writing this book,
I said, like, I don't even know how to get all my thoughts into this.
But I think what was really important for me as a journalist is to find the best of the best out there to to interview and to make sure women had something actionable.
Because if they're going through brain fog and they're not feeling good, they just want to know what to do.
Like, what what do I do to get to feel better?
And so sleep was a big one. And for a long time, I used to consider sleep a luxury. Like, I'll sleep when I can, but I'm going to brag about the fact that I've gotten by
and four hours of sleep tonight and I can do all this stuff.
But I've realized really how important it is.
I've realized what it takes for me to get good sleep because it doesn't just happen.
I don't just jump into bed and it happens.
And I've realized it's more a lot of preparation and a lot of focus on it and working my schedule as much
as I can because I know it's not possible to do all the time and we have a lot of things
going on at this part of life but I think it's important to focus on and that's really
what I did in that chapter of the book.
Sleep is something that impacts 85% of the cohort that we studied and we know that sleep
is so important in terms of all sorts of factors
related to our health. We consider it to be one of the four key pillars of health. So
we've got diet, we've got physical activity, we've got stress, we've got sleep. We also
know that sleep impacts the dietary choices that we make. If you have a poor night's sleep,
the reward centers in your brain are on kind of fire and saying, hey, Tamsin, you've had
a bad night's sleep, go and eat that sugary
breakfast, that refined carbohydrate. We also know if you've had a poor night's sleep, your
response to any meal is also worse. And we've published research on this that shows that
if you have a poor night's sleep, your blood sugar response the next day to a meal is a
lot worse, so it's a lot higher compared to if you've had a good night's sleep. So you
kind of set yourself up on this roller coaster. We also know from the Zorymenopause study as well, that if you have better sleep, that also offsets
some of the other symptoms, meaning that those people who have better sleep, which we know
is a symptom, but they have less symptoms and less impactful symptoms. And so I think
it's really great that actually you talk about that first, because we can use that as the cornerstone, maybe, from which we can start
to improve other symptoms.
I like that.
What are the tips?
Somebody's listening, they're like, great, what can I do?
My sleep, let's jump into sleep.
I don't know, drinking is a thing that I think that I have just moved off the
table as much as possible.
But if someone's having a glass of wine, having it any time, four hours, close to bedtime
is gonna knock your sleep off completely,
trying to be really cognizant of devices.
I'm not good enough or virtuous enough
to take my device out of the bedroom.
But I do try to make sure it's on that blue light mode
and I try to make sure that I'm not dealing with problems
closer to bedtime at all.
I do make sure that I'm trying to go to bed at the same time
and get up at the same time every day,
which is not anything I'd ever done before.
I was the kind that was up till 2 o'clock in the morning.
I'd get up at 6. I'd go work out.
And I do feel like that consistency has played a huge role
for me in feeling better the next day.
When I get up in the morning now,
no matter if it's raining or sunny out,
first thing I do is get outside.
It's made a huge difference in my life.
I started it about a year and a half ago when I was writing the book.
I talked to a doctor who had really just
focused on light and understanding how light impacted the body.
So I wanted to make sure that I was doing that and putting that practice into play.
So those are some of the bigger things I do.
I set my bedroom goes completely black.
I have tape over any of those lights
that are on every device that you have.
I have a TV in the bedroom, that's my husband's fault,
but I make sure that stays off a few hours before bed.
And I used to be the person that went,
I don't know, I don't know,
does that really make a difference?
It makes a huge difference.
It really does.
We've done some work looking at the importance
of sleep consistency on different health outcomes
and also on the dietary choices that you make.
So we published some research at ZOE looking at what we call social jet lag.
And 10 years ago, you would have been a prime target for this study.
So this is where people have different sleep patterns.
So it might be that you're very consistent in the week, but you're going wild at the weekend.
Or it might be if you're hardworking like I am at ZOE, that you're going a bit wild
in the week because you're too excited by your research and you stay up far too late
working on it and then you catch up at the weekend.
But either way, you're inconsistent, your pattern is inconsistent.
And we've shown from our research on social jet lag that it does have an association with
health.
And those people who have the social jet lag
or the inconsistency also make poorer dietary choices.
So have higher sugar, higher refined carbohydrates,
for example, in their diet.
I mean, I did that a long time in news.
You're in the news business.
I never had a nine to five job in news.
It was get up at two o'clock in the morning
and be at the station by 4 a.m.
Yeah, but I would reward myself and think like, I can eat some junk food now because I'm so tired.
I just got to wake up a little bit. That was for about 10 plus years and then I'll flip
aside about 15 years. I did the night shift so I wouldn't get off of the air until 11 o'clock
at night. So I'd get home by midnight. I'd wind down a little bit. I'd have a snack. You know,
I did all of those things. So those hours were so off. So I've definitely seen a difference in no longer saying I can just
survive on three hours.
I might come with age two.
So the World Health Organization have shift work listed with a health warning
because they know that it has such a bad impact on our health.
That's amazing.
So Sarah's going to be really interested about this, I think, because
Tansyn, you talk about some recipes that some people believe can actually That's amazing. So Sarah's going to be really interested about this, I think, because Tanzen,
you talk about some recipes that some people believe can actually help alleviate these
symptoms.
Yeah, you know, in the book, I talk a lot about a Mediterranean diet, I'm Lebanese,
and it was what I grew up on. And it was a diet of whole foods, it was a diet of lots
of olive oil and lots of all kind of plant based vegetables, and then you throw in fish.
And so I decided in the book, because I felt like a lot of these things were game changers for me.
They were the basics that I went back to.
I took some old recipes from my family, old family recipes.
The one in particular was one that my dad, we did growing up.
We had grape leaves growing up,
so I changed out the rice for quinoa.
We had the grape leaves rolled, drizzled with olive oil,
all of these really super healthy for your diet. We did a salmon instead of a chicken,
and then we made sure we had some Mediterranean vegetables with all sorts of spices and a tabbouleh
salad. So those are, like, the kind of recipes that I put in the book because, one, that's what
I grew up eating, two, a lot of them go back to the whole foods that I think are really,
really important for this diet. And I think they're easy to do. They're not these difficult, I
can't do recipes with 20 ingredients in them. I need it simple and I need to know that I'm
going to be consistent about it. So that's what I did in the book.
Sounds delicious. I want to be invited around to your house.
I would love it.
I'll be there.
You're welcome too. We've already broken bread together. around to your house. I would love it. I'll be there.
You're welcome too. We've already broken bread together. It often manifests like, I don't know if this is true enough, but the next day is when I just feel awful. If I've eaten poorly one day
or made choices, it just didn't make sense because I, you know, didn't have time. I just feel
differently the next day. So that's been another kind of consistency I've tried to have. Yeah,
we know that food impacts how you feel that day, but we also know how you eat, so the timing
that you eat and what you eat actually can impact how you metabolize food the next day and also how
you feel the next day. And it's interesting you mentioned the Mediterranean diet. There's been
very little research on how diet can impact menopause symptoms. Apart from the work we've
been doing, there is one study that's looked at the Mediterranean diet,
and people were randomly allocated to either follow
like a typical UK-US style diet or the Mediterranean diet.
Those people following the Mediterranean diet
had a 30% reduction in some symptoms.
They only measured a few symptoms because until recently,
people weren't talking about all the other symptoms.
And so this is why the work that we've been doing,
like all the other symptoms, I think, in relationship with diets,
are really, really interesting.
Yeah, I do too. I'd love to hear that too,
because I feel like women are constantly asking,
like, what can I do?
And to be able to have an answer like that is really important.
Is someone in your life experiencing one of the symptoms
we've talked about today?
Maybe they don't suspect it could be menopause.
Why not share this episode with them right now?
With the right advice, there could be a simple way to help them feel better.
I'm sure they'll thank you.
Well, I'd love to ask that because, you know, when we set up Zoe seven or eight
years ago now, I never thought at all that food could have any impact
on menopause symptoms. If you'd asked me, I'd have said that sounds completely crazy.
Is it completely crazy, Sarah?
It's crazy that it does because I thought exactly the same. So we've done this really exciting study where we have followed up just over 4,000 women
who are peri- and postmenopausal who are following the ZoE program.
So the ZoE membership is this program of personalized nutrition and at the heart of it is eating
according to the personalized guidance that we give, a very plant-based,
diverse, fiber-rich kind of diet. We also encourage other healthy lifestyle changes,
but it's predominantly focusing on diet. So the ZOE members following the personalized
nutrition program had a 35% reduction after an average of 18 weeks in their symptoms. And we also saw differences in the level of reduction,
depending on the kind of symptoms. So where we saw the biggest reduction was in these
psychological symptoms. When you say psychological symptoms, what does that mean?
So these are symptoms such as the brain fog, the memory loss, the irritability, the low mood,
the anxiety, the depression. They don't sound really, to me, I don loss, the irritability, the low mood, the anxiety, the depression.
They don't sound really, to me, I don't know what you think, Tanya, they sound like pretty
real, like brain fog doesn't sound-
They're real.
That sounds pretty real.
It's very real.
Rage is another one.
There are some real symptoms that I-
Mood swings up, down, up, down.
I mean, you think of a, you know, women with puberty, like that, those are, you know, those
are the up downs and they're real.
They're real symptoms.
And I think that that's what we're talking about when we say like, you don't feel like
I don't feel like myself anymore.
I can't tell you how many times I've said that over the course of this whole transition.
Probably the majority of long-term listeners are Zoe members, but a lot of people listening
us who don't know what that is, what are the key parts of that membership that people are
going through that was achieving that change?
Because I think a lot of people listening are like, well, what does that involve?
Okay, so the ZOE membership involves getting this lovely yellow box that has various tests
that allows us to test people's individual responses to food through their micro-bone,
through wearing a glucose monitor, and lots of other ways as well.
We then deliver about personalized dietary advice that enables
people to follow the best diet for their biology with support from coaches, lots of fun things
like recipe cards, we have links to groceries, deliveries, that sort of stuff. And then you
can opt at the end of a certain period, so let's say 12 weeks, to actually have certain
things retested, like your microbiome retested, and also answer again lots more
questions about your health. And it's this data that we've been using for
menopause research to look at those who are ZOE members and following the ZOE
Personalised Nutrition Programme, how their change in diet is linked to their
change in menopause symptoms.
And what we see is that on average,
people following the Zeri program and therefore making
these dietary changes reduce their symptoms on average by 35 percent,
but that there's big differences in the different symptoms.
So psychological symptoms, for example,
some of those can reduce as much as 40 percent.
And I think that's really interesting because there's now a huge body of work coming out
from Lisa Moschini's group,
looking at how the brain is regulated.
And people are putting forward this idea now
that actually menopause is a state of neurological disruption,
which explains why the most common symptoms
are these neurological, psychological
symptoms.
The fact that on the ZOE program we're seeing these ones reduce the most, I think is really
encouraging.
I think that's because we also know from our own work where we've done conducted a randomized
control trial where we compared the ZOE program versus the U.S. average diet, we actually
saw that some of the psychological symptoms that we asked people about.
So mood, for example, had
the biggest improvement on the ZOE program as well.
So all ties in quite nicely.
We've got all these different pieces
of the puzzle now fitting together.
I think that it's so important for us to feel like two things,
we're not alone, we're not going crazy.
I think that those are the two things I
kept overwhelmingly hear women say,
which kept pushing me into this area of like, wow, what is going on
that everybody is going through this and that everybody feels so alone.
I can't wrap up without talking about this amazing brand new free tool,
which I'm amazed Sarah you haven't already plugged three times in this podcast.
So, Sarah, you must be a little jet-lagged.
You've done something on the back of all of this research.
Would you explain what it is?
I would.
So, we have developed a new tool called the Menoscale.
And this is a tool that basically allows women very easily, at no cost,
to record the burden that menopause has on them.
So it allows them to look at how many symptoms they have and
the impact that they have on people's quality of life.
The reason we've done this is because there's actually
nothing out there and that enables us to track our symptoms.
As a scientist, we always say,
if you can't measure it, you can't change it.
For me, that's what's at the heart
of this Menoscale calculator. So people can go online, they can go to zoe4slashmenoscale.com.
It takes a couple of minutes to complete it. We ask you a few very basic questions about
your age, whether you're on HRT, for example, and then you tick whether you have 20 of what
we now know, so it's informed by our research of
the most common symptoms, and then you grade them in terms of how much impact they have
on their quality of life.
You then get a score of 0 to 100.
Now then what you can do with this score is lots of things.
Firstly, you can use it to track how anything that you might want to do to help your menopause
can impact it, whether it's changing your diet and changing your physical activity, going on HRT, for example.
It enables you to then see what works for you, which I think is really, really important.
When I started on HRT, I went to my GP.
They said, well, can you track your symptoms?
Well, how am I going to do that on some scrappy piece of paper that I know I'm going to lose
somewhere? If I'd have had that a couple of years ago, that would have been fantastic. to do that on some scrappy piece of paper that I know I'm going to lose somewhere.
If I'd have had that a couple of years ago, that would have been fantastic.
And that allows you to titrate your dose if you want to do that or change your diet according
to what works best for you.
The other thing is, well, Jonathan, I think it allows us to talk about our symptoms and
going back to what you were saying, Tamsin, that it means that I could talk to my friends
and say, actually, this is how I'm scoring.
And I don't mean it in a competitive way,
but I mean it as in getting that reassurance that we're not alone.
So when you get your score back,
you get also how this compares to a woman of a similar age,
the average woman of a similar age on HRT or not on HRT.
And it also tells you about your top symptoms
and how that compares to other people.
So it kind of enables you not to feel alone,
but it also enables you to share and discuss it
with people around you.
But I think that, and also, selfishly I get,
if you tick the consent that we can use it for research,
I get to look at all of this data
and also enable us to move forward, you know,
even further on the menopause research
that we're doing at ZOE.
Also, while you're getting the research and women are able to be a part of it and get more data,
you're creating a community helping move this message forward and helping solve this.
There's something to that that is so valuable for women to feel that they're taking part in
helping. We're all in this together and I think that that's what I've noticed
more than anything with this conversation.
And I love that because at Zoey we talk about community science and that's at the heart
of what we do that everyone that becomes a Zoey member, if they consent to share their
data with us as scientists, they are becoming community scientists because their data, they
are pushing forward our understanding of research. And it's the same with the Menno scale.
They're becoming community menopause scientists.
So everyone, please go fill it out.
Well, we'll put a link in the show notes for anybody.
Pretty much the time, but Tamsin,
I really want to end on a message
that I felt was really powerful from your book,
because you talked about how often there's this fear
of like almost becoming invisible, and you don't want to think about this. And you talked about how often there's this fear of like almost becoming invisible, you know, when I think about this and you talk about feeling of growing bolder through
menopause and I'd love you to maybe share that before we wrap.
Oh, thank you for pulling that out.
Yeah, I am.
I was trying to like figure out, you know, what I've learned through this whole experience
of aging and of menopause and of being very vocal about this story because I don't know
that I would have done it five years ago.
I would have said, I'm not getting any older.
But I said, I don't think we're going into these as golden years.
I think these are our golden years.
I feel like I've gotten, you know, I always have a little bit of fear, of course, but
I feel like I'm a little more vocal.
I'm advocating for myself.
I want to do amazing things next, you know, and I'm not in that game of comparison
and that game of competitiveness.
I'm in that wanting to feel good going forward
and knowing that I'm living my someday today, right?
And so I wanna get every part out of it
and that's really important to me.
So I feel, you know, like we're a little bolder,
a little sexier, a little wiser these days
than, you know, what commercials may indicate that we're two older people
sitting on a bench in a park petting a cat.
You know, that's not what I want to be.
And if anyone's listening to this and saying,
well, I would like to be growing bolder.
Do you have any advice for other women to achieve the same?
Yeah, absolutely.
I mean, I think first and foremost, I'm big about, you know,
you've got to take control of your health,
because if you don't feel good, you can't do that next step of acting.
It doesn't work.
And I think that that gives you control.
It makes you feel like you're in the right place
moving forward.
I think stop putting these old narratives into place
that I'm too old, that my best years are behind me,
that I should have done it back then.
We have a long road ahead of us.
It's very different.
We're living longer. I think we're living healthier. I think we We have a long road ahead of us. It's very different. We're living longer.
I think we're living healthier.
I think we're living with more opportunity ahead of us.
And so that's my advice is to really embrace that
and not leave it for someday,
because today is someday.
That's beautiful.
I'd like to wrap up as always with a little summary.
And both of you keep me honest if I get it wrong.
We started with this incredibly powerful story, Tamzin,
about how you could end up lying on the bathroom floor
with like the sudden impact of these symptoms,
not even realizing really that you'd been having
this series of symptoms maybe for years,
it sounds like potentially, and then suddenly it's like bang
and your body is saying, no, you can't ignore this anymore.
This is like a big deal.
And so it makes you realize this is a big deal
and it's important to talk about it.
And it's important to understand whether it's affecting you
or your loved ones as it is going to be in my case,
that there are a huge number of symptoms associated.
I think you said on average 13 symptoms
in perimenopause, Sarah.
Correct.
And then you said 10 or something in menopause.
Correct.
So like an enormous number of symptoms,
which is very different from most things
where there's like this one very clear symptom.
And so, you can, it's obviously complicated.
It's not just symptoms.
This has a big impact on your health.
And you were saying Sarah, women are on average much healthier than men until perimenopause.
And then there's this like catching up or even getting worse at this point.
So, you've really got to see that change.
And you talked about, you know, your biology really changing.
So, that just one example of that, that I think a lot of listeners will stuck on
is suddenly the estrogen that was pushing any fat towards your
legs, it's like no, no, no, put it on your tummy and that's real. It's not because
suddenly you're eating worse, it's because your body has changed and that's
a reality you've got to deal with. You can take control of your health.
This isn't something that is just genetics.
There's nothing you can do like you're stuck with it,
which is something that comes up a lot on this podcast,
but here I think is particularly powerful.
You can't duck the fact that this is going to happen,
but you can take control of its impact on your health.
Sarah has just launched this amazing new free tool.
And the first step to taking control of your health. Sarah has just launched this amazing new free tool and the first step to taking control of your health is just to understand actually
the symptoms you have. It's called the Menascale Calculator. It's based upon
this huge study that you've done. You can find it at zoe.com slash menopause.
It'll be on the links as a way to sort of understand where you are. And
then I think, you know, to wrap up, we talked about this really amazing new research
that suggests that diet and your microbiome actually is interrelated with your menopause,
despite the fact that Sarah and I both thought that sounded crazy.
That there's all this data, Sarah, you said that menopause is changing your microbiome,
that you can get more of particular bad microbes, which I'm going to say,
even if your microbiologist friends don't like it, because I don't have a lot of microbiologist friends, Tamsin, so it's
okay.
But interestingly, brand new research, actually, you can see this link between how bad your
symptoms are and your microbiome.
You can see that this thing is sort of really deeply interlinked.
And that's especially around things like brain fog and low mood, which are exactly the same
things that you also said are most linked to the food you eat.
And just, you know, to wrap up, diet really can improve your menopause symptoms in a big way.
And you shared the results of this study of Zoey membership, saying that on average it actually reduced these menopause symptoms
as calculated through your, you're calculated by 35%, which is like a really big amount. And I think that just fits into this incredibly positive story
that you're not completely stuck. It's not like there's nothing you can do about
it. And I think it is fascinating how much the lifestyle that we lead impacts
this. It's not only a question of whether you're taking hormone replacement or
not, which is I think something we've touched on only a question of whether you're taking hormone replacement or not, which is
I think something we've touched on on a number of other podcasts that people are interested.
Did I catch the key bits? You are a genius at summing up. A genius. Jonathan, I think one thing to
emphasize is what Tamsin said about sleep. And although it's a symptom of menopause, I think
it's often so overwhelming when you're in the menopause, the amount of
things that are going on, the amount of changes that you might need to make if you are following
an unhealthy diet.
So I think that actually maybe to start with a really good action is to focus on some of
the things that Tamsin said about sleep and make that the first thing that anyone's listening
to do today.
Why don't you make sleep the priority this week?
And then that might give you the strength to then make some of the other changes.
Brilliant. Thank you both so much.
I always find this is incredibly powerful as a topic to talk about.
And I always feel both privileged to be in the room and slightly embarrassed somehow
as if I shouldn't be in the room. So thank you very much.
Thank you.
Now, if you listen to the show regularly,
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As always, I'm your host, Jonathan Wolff. Zoey's Science and Nutrition is produced by Julie Pinero,
Sam Durham, and Richard Willough. The Zoey's Science and Nutrition podcast is not medical
advice. If you have any medical concerns, please consult your doctor.
See you next time.