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Soy is closely linked to women in terms of health benefits. Women in their menopause
go through irritating and often painful symptoms, such as hot flashes. Hot flashes
are sudden sensations of warmth mostly in the face and neck. They are also referred
to as night sweats since they may also come during sleep. These hot flashes are
still insufficiently understood among scientists, although their cause is undeniably
due to the decrease in estrogen in women as they get older.
In the previous years, women fought these menopause symptoms by hormone therapies
containing conjugated equine estrogen. However, after this practice was denounced
as increasing the risk of breast cancer, heart diseases, strokes, and Alzheimer's
disease, they turned to alternative methods to overcome menopause discomforts. The
best alternative has proved to be consuming isoflavones which are highly abundant
in soy, especially genistein and daidzein.
Isoflavones are bioactive compounds that are interchangeable with phytoestrogens,
which are plant estrogens. Although their forms do look like estrogens, isoflavones
act very differently in the human body, and therefore, should not be considered
similar to human estrogens. They are much weaker than naturally circulating human
estrogens for they have approximately 1/1000th the biological activity of synthetic
estrogens. Hence, they do not have estrogen-like effects inside our body. Not only
do isoflavones lower the number of hot flashes that arise, but studies also show
us that they cling to estrogen receptors and may block some of the negative effects
that estrogen can bring to women, such as cancer cell growth.
Consuming soy foods at any age, especially during childhood and adolescence along
with a healthy diet, prevents females from developing breast cancer. Eating soy
foods early in life may be one of the factors that explains why Asian women have
lower breast cancer rates. The breast cancer rate among Japanese women, who are
known to consume much more soy compared to Western women, is only one-fifth of that
of the US. In addition, recent research suggests that there is not an increased
risk of breast cancer for post-menopausal women consuming soy foods.
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