I've been hearing several talks from the last Autoimmune summit: _http://autoimmunesummit.com/
Many of the topics have been already discussed in this forum, but it was interesting to hear the speculations on why autoimmune diseases are more frequent in women.
They were discussing that certain metabolites (16alpha-hydroxyestrone) were associated with an increased risk of autoimmune diseases, while other metabolites (estriol) were associated with a decreased risk. This is why some women improve during pregnancy, and then relapse afterwards. Estriol is only produced in significant amounts during pregnancy as it is made by the placenta. Anecdotally, a physician shared that she knew of people keeping placentas after their pregnancies to use as supplements :/
Clinicians were reporting how their autoimmune patients improved with estrogen cream (without 16alpha-hydroxyestrone), diindolylmethane (DIM) and indole-3-carbinol (I3C) derived from cruciferous vegetables (which alter estrogen metabolism) , curcumin, primrose oil (very favored for re-balancing hormones) and Omega 3s in generous quantities.
The topic of estrogen and autoimmunity is hardly discussed, but it was interesting to see that clinicians were seeing positive results with their patients. It was also interesting to see that this was something happening in peripheral tissues, i.e. joints as in rheumatoid arthritis but also other autoimmune diseases. So measuring estrogen metabolites in blood was not very clarifying.
They also noted that women who took oral contraceptives were particularly at risk for autoimmune diseases.
More information here:
Estrogen metabolism and autoimmunity
_http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22155198
Estrogens and autoimmune diseases
_http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17261796
It seems to me that this is one of the reasons why low dose doxycicline therapy is so useful in rheumatoid arthritis, it helps to decrease the production of inflammatory cytokines in peripheral tissue.
Minus the estrogen cream, all suggested supplements are very easy to get and safe to try as they only add benefits.
FWIW!
Many of the topics have been already discussed in this forum, but it was interesting to hear the speculations on why autoimmune diseases are more frequent in women.
They were discussing that certain metabolites (16alpha-hydroxyestrone) were associated with an increased risk of autoimmune diseases, while other metabolites (estriol) were associated with a decreased risk. This is why some women improve during pregnancy, and then relapse afterwards. Estriol is only produced in significant amounts during pregnancy as it is made by the placenta. Anecdotally, a physician shared that she knew of people keeping placentas after their pregnancies to use as supplements :/
Clinicians were reporting how their autoimmune patients improved with estrogen cream (without 16alpha-hydroxyestrone), diindolylmethane (DIM) and indole-3-carbinol (I3C) derived from cruciferous vegetables (which alter estrogen metabolism) , curcumin, primrose oil (very favored for re-balancing hormones) and Omega 3s in generous quantities.
The topic of estrogen and autoimmunity is hardly discussed, but it was interesting to see that clinicians were seeing positive results with their patients. It was also interesting to see that this was something happening in peripheral tissues, i.e. joints as in rheumatoid arthritis but also other autoimmune diseases. So measuring estrogen metabolites in blood was not very clarifying.
They also noted that women who took oral contraceptives were particularly at risk for autoimmune diseases.
More information here:
Estrogen metabolism and autoimmunity
_http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22155198
Epidemiological and experimental immunological evidence suggest that estrogens enhance the humoral immune response, and at the same time, seem to play important roles in pathophysiology of autoimmune rheumatic diseases. Estrogens in human subjects are generally considered as enhancers of cell proliferation (anti-apoptotic), however, rather than through their serum levels (that may exert opposite dose-related effects), they play important roles through their peripheral metabolites especially in autoimmune rheumatic diseases. Several investigations strongly support an accelerated aromatase-mediated peripheral metabolic conversion of upstream androgen precursors to estrogen metabolites in peripheral tissues affected by immune/inflammatory reactions, both, in male and female patients. In RA synovial tissue, biological effects of these metabolites as a consequence of altered peripheral sex hormone synthesis (intracrine, e.g., at the level of macrophages and fibroblasts) mainly results in stimulation of cell proliferation and cytokine production (i.e. TNF). It was shown that RA synovial cells mainly produce the cell proproliferative 16alpha-hydroxyestrone which, in addition to 16alpha-hydroxy-17beta-estradiol, is the downstream estrogen metabolite that interferes with monocyte proliferation. Therefore, a preponderance of 16alpha-hydroxylated estrogens is an unfavorable sign, at least, in synovial inflammation and possibly related synovial tissue hyperplasia. Interestingly, urinary concentration and total urinary loss of 2-hydroxyestrogens was found 10 times higher in healthy subjects compared to RA or SLE patients irrespective of prior prednisolone treatment or sex. The intracrine synthesis of active estrogen metabolites at the level of cells involved in the immune response (e.g. macrophages and fibroblasts) represents a common pathway that characterizes a similar final immune reactivity in both male and female patients.
Estrogens and autoimmune diseases
_http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17261796
Sex hormones are implicated in the immune response, with estrogens as enhancers at least of the humoral immunity and androgens and progesterone (and glucocorticoids) as natural immune-suppressors . Several physiological, pathological, and therapeutic conditions may change the serum estrogen milieu and/or peripheral conversion rate, including the menstrual cycle, pregnancy, postpartum period, menopause, being elderly, chronic stress, altered circadian rhythms, inflammatory cytokines, and use of corticosteroids, oral contraceptives, and steroid hormonal replacements, inducing altered androgen/estrogen ratios and related effects. In particular, cortisol and melatonin circadian rhythms are altered, at least in rheumatoid arthritis (RA), and partially involve sex hormone circadian synthesis and levels as well. Abnormal regulation of aromatase activity (i.e., increased activity) by inflammatory cytokine production (i.e., TNF-alpha, IL-1, and IL-6) may partially explain the abnormalities of peripheral estrogen synthesis in RA (i.e., increased availability of 17-beta estradiol and possible metabolites in synovial fluids) and in systemic lupus erythematosus, as well as the altered serum sex-hormone levels and ratio (i.e., decreased androgens and DHEAS). In the synovial fluids of RA patients, the increased estrogen concentration is observed in both sexes and is more specifically characterized by the hydroxylated forms, in particular 16alpha-hydroxyestrone, which is a mitogenic and cell proliferative endogenous hormone. Local effects of sex hormones in autoimmune rheumatic diseases seems to consist mainly in modulation of cell proliferation and cytokine production (i.e., TNF-alpha, Il-1, IL-12). In this respect, it is interesting that male patients with RA seem to profit more from anti-TNFalpha strategies than do female patients.
It seems to me that this is one of the reasons why low dose doxycicline therapy is so useful in rheumatoid arthritis, it helps to decrease the production of inflammatory cytokines in peripheral tissue.
Minus the estrogen cream, all suggested supplements are very easy to get and safe to try as they only add benefits.
FWIW!