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Education

Stephanie Da Silva Davis, MD

Start with the Foundations

Ten clinician-written topic summaries covering the essential education every woman navigating midlife deserves.

01. What Is Sexual Health — and Why It Matters

Sexual health goes far beyond intimacy. It reflects how your body feels, how your hormones function, and how comfortable and confident you feel in your own skin. Sexual health includes libido, arousal, lubrication, comfort, and orgasm — as well as your relationship with your body. It is not dependent on whether you are sexually active. When sexual health is supported, women often notice improved confidence, more stable mood, better connection, and greater vitality.

Sexual health is not a luxury. It is a reflection of whole-body health.

02. Understanding Your Hormones After 35

Estrogen, progesterone, and testosterone are foundational regulators of how you feel every day — not just reproductive signals. These hormones work in a feedback loop between your brain and ovaries. As that communication becomes less predictable, women may feel more anxious, more fatigued, or less resilient — before anything on the surface seems hormonal. Understanding this early allows for proactive care.

03. Perimenopause
Explained

Perimenopause can begin in your late 30s or early 40s and last several years. During this time estrogen fluctuates unpredictably, progesterone declines, and the brain is constantly adapting. Common experiences include disrupted sleep, anxiety, brain fog, cycle changes, and decreased recovery. This is not just a reproductive transition — it is a neurological one. When we recognize that, we can treat it appropriately.

Perimenopause is a biological transition — not a mystery — and understanding it allows for proactive care.

04. Vulvar & Vaginal Anatomy:
What Every Woman Should Know

The vulva is the external anatomy: labia, clitoris, urethra, and vaginal opening. The clitoris — central to sexual function — is largely internal. The pelvic floor is a group of muscles that support pelvic organs, control bladder and bowel function, and contribute to sexual function. Understanding your anatomy allows you to better identify where symptoms are coming from and communicate clearly with your provider.

Awareness is the first step to ownership of your health.

05. Vaginal Estrogen & GSM:
What Is Safe and What Works

Genitourinary syndrome of menopause (GSM) occurs when estrogen declines and affects vaginal, vulvar, and urinary tissue — causing dryness, burning, pain with intimacy, and urinary urgency. Many women assume this is just aging. It is not. It is a treatable medical condition. Local vaginal estradiol or DHEA restores tissue health, improves blood flow, and reduces urinary symptoms. These therapies are considered safe and effective for most women.

This is one of the highest-impact, lowest-risk interventions in women's health.

06. Libido in Midlife:
It's Not Just About Sex

Libido is the result of multiple systems: hormones, brain chemistry, stress, sleep, physical comfort, and emotional connection. There are two types of desire — spontaneous (interest first) and responsive (interest develops after connection begins). Many women shift toward responsive desire in midlife and assume something is wrong. It is not. It is a normal evolution. If libido has changed, the question is not 'What's wrong?' — it is: 'What factors are influencing this?'

Libido is dynamic. Understanding the root cause leads to better solutions.

07. Testosterone in Women:
What You Need to Know

Women produce testosterone naturally — from the ovaries and adrenal glands. It plays a role in sexual desire, motivation, confidence, and physical strength. Levels decline gradually with age and more rapidly after menopause. In select women, testosterone therapy may be helpful, particularly when libido is persistently low and other causes have been addressed. It is most effective as part of a comprehensive plan that also addresses estrogen, progesterone, lifestyle, sleep, and stress.

Testosterone is not just a male hormone. Women need it too — in the right balance.

08. Pelvic Floor Dysfunction
& Dyspareunia

Pain with sex is common. But it is never normal. The pelvic floor muscles can become tight, overactive, or uncoordinated — leading to pain with penetration, pelvic tension, and urinary symptoms. Hormonal changes can further increase tissue sensitivity. Pelvic floor physical therapy is one of the most effective treatments available — it retrains muscle patterns, reduces pain, and restores function.

Pain is not something to push through — it is something to understand and treat.

09. Hormones & the Brain:
Why You Don't Feel Like Yourself

Estrogen interacts with serotonin, dopamine, and sleep regulation pathways — which is why hormonal changes can feel like anxiety, mood instability, loss of focus, and emotional sensitivity. These symptoms are often dismissed. They are not imagined — they are biological. When hormonal balance is supported, women commonly see improved sleep, improved mood, and better cognitive clarity.

Hormones and brain health are deeply connected. These symptoms deserve evaluation and support.

10. Hormone Therapy:
What Has Changed Since the WHI

Hormone therapy has been clouded by outdated messaging from the early 2000s. The science has evolved. We now understand that timing matters, patient selection matters, and formulation matters. For many women, hormone therapy improves symptoms, supports bone health, and enhances quality of life. Current guidelines support individualized, evidence-based decision-making — not avoidance based on fear.

The conversation has changed — and care should reflect that.

Hear It Directly from Dr. Da Silva

01

What is Sexual Health — and Why It Matters

02

Hormones & the Brain: Why You Don't Feel Like Yourself

03

Understanding Your Hormones in Midlife: Overview of Sex Hormones

04

Perimenopause Explained Clearly

05

Vulvar & Vaginal Anatomy: What Every Woman Should Know

06

Vaginal Estrogen & GSM: What Is Safe and What Works

07

Libido in Midlife: It's Not Just About Sex

08

Testosterone in Women: What You Need to Know

09

Pelvic Floor Dysfunction & Dyspareunia

10

Hormone Therapy: What Has Changed Since the WHI

Hormones & Midlife

Understanding how your hormones work together — and what happens when they shift — is the foundation of informed midlife care.

Your Midlife Hormone Trio

Testosterone Therapy in Women

Testosterone peaks in a woman’s 20s and declines roughly 50% by the mid-40s. After menopause, ovarian production stops entirely.

The goal is to restore testosterone to normal female levels — monitored by labs and symptoms. Works best as part of a comprehensive plan.

Testosterone is not just a male hormone. Women need it too — in the right balance — for sexual health, energy, mood, muscle, and bones.

Bioidentical Hormone Therapy: The Stepwise Approach

Bioidentical hormones are structurally identical to those your body produces. FDA-approved options include transdermal estradiol and micronized progesterone.

Bioidentical Hormone Therapy: The Stepwise Approach

Bioidentical hormones are structurally identical to those your body produces. FDA-approved options include transdermal estradiol and micronized progesterone.

Step 1

Initial evaluation: symptoms, history, goals, labs (estradiol, FSH, TSH, testosterone)

Step 2

Start low, go slow: low-dose transdermal estradiol with progesterone if uterus is present

Step 3

Track symptoms: sleep, hot flashes, mood, vaginal comfort

Step 4

Reassess at 6–12 weeks: adjust based on symptoms, not just labs

Step 5

Annual review: ongoing discussion of benefits, risks, and goals

The goal is to restore balance — not perfection. Shared decision-making is key.

Sexual & Pelvic Health

Common conditions — clearly explained, with evidence-based treatment options. Pain, discomfort, and anatomical changes are not something to accept or push through.

Hormonally Mediated Vestibulodynia

Burning, stinging, or pain at the vaginal entrance — especially with touch or intercourse — is often linked to changes in estrogen and testosterone. When hormone levels drop, vestibular tissue becomes thin, dry, and sensitive.

Most women see significant improvement within 6–12 weeks. The goal is restoring comfort, confidence, and pleasure.

Understanding & Treating Vaginismus

Vaginismus is the involuntary tightening of pelvic floor muscles, making penetration painful or impossible. It is common and treatable.

Most women improve significantly with pelvic PT, dilators, and relaxation training. Healing takes patience — but progress is usually steady.

Nutrition & Lifestyle

What you eat, how you supplement, and how you manage your environment all influence how you feel through the perimenopause and menopause transition.

Nutrition Priorities

Key Supplements

Supplement

Why It Helps

Daily Amount

Vitamin D3

Bone, mood, immune health

1,000–2,000 IU

Magnesium glycinate

Sleep, relaxation, bone health

200–400 mg

Omega-3 (EPA/DHA)

Heart, brain, mood, anti-inflammatory

1–2 g

Calcium (if diet is low)

Bone support, muscle function

1,000–1,200 mg

Protein powder

Convenient protein boost

20–30 g

Always consult your healthcare provider before starting supplements.

Histamine & Perimenopause

During perimenopause, fluctuating estrogen increases histamine release and decreases its breakdown — causing symptoms often mistaken for stress or anxiety.

Cardiovascular

Flushing, palpitations, dizziness

Neurological

Headaches, anxiety, brain fog, insomnia

Gastrointestinal

Bloating, nausea, food sensitivities (wine, cheese, fermented foods)

Hormonal

Worsening PMS, breast tenderness, cycle-linked migraines

Managing histamine involves reducing triggers, stabilizing mast cells, and supporting histamine-clearing pathways. A low-histamine diet, mast cell-stabilizing supplements (quercetin, vitamin C, magnesium), and stress reduction are the key tools.

Always consult your healthcare provider before beginning any new treatment protocol.

Recommended Resources

Physician-curated tools, products, and links — organized by topic.

Rx: Estrace, Vagifem / Yuvafem, Imvexxy, Estring, Intrarosa, Beswecken DHEA

OTC: Revaree, Replens, Medicine Mama Vulva Balm, Via Solv Wellness, Uberlube

Rx: Addyi, Vyleesi, Testosterone — Testim, Androgel, compounded

Vella Women’s Pleasure Serum — vellabio.com

Foria — foriabotanicals.com

Alice Mushroom Chocolate — Happy Endings — alicemushrooms.com

Ristela by Bonafide — hellobonafide.com

Taboo to Truth — taboototruth.com

Hormonally — hormonally.org

Pelvic Global — pelvicglobal.com

Trusted Thought Leaders

Sexual Health Specialists

Midlife & Hormonal Health

Kelly Casperson, MD

Heather Hirsch, MD

Rachel Rubin, MD

Mary Claire Haver, MD

Sameena Rahman, MD

Vonda Wright, MD

Jill Krapf, MD

Sharon Malone, MD

Sarah Cigna, MD

Aviva Romm, MD

Advocacy

Tight Lipped — Pelvic Pain Advocacy Nonprofit — tightlipped.org

ISSWSH / Prosayla — Sexual Health Education — prosayla.com

Marcella Hill — Wake Her Up — wakeherup.co