History of
androgenic disease of
menopause
(in short)
The
menopause disease
explains a set of disorders which appear after the menopause.
This new concept (1) made a continuation of the
andropause disease
described by Doctor Georges Debled for tens of years.
During this period, which goes back to 1974, many women consulted
for micturition's disorders. They were generally regarded as
"hysterical" by doctors.
In psychoanalysis and history of psychology, hysteria is a neurosis
touching women and men, in different clinical pictures, where
functional demonstrations express psychical conflict (anesthesia,
paralyzes, blindness, spams) without internal injury, emotional
crises with theatricalism, and phobias (see Wikipedia).
Organic pathologies of the female urethra (and of the
male urethra)
were ignored. Women and men presenting these micturition's disorders
were consequently "hysterical' "by doctors.
It was, however, enough to study the complaints of these patients to
show
the
normal
and
abnormal function
of the posterior urethra, according to data of endoscopy, urodynamic
and
anatomopathological studies.
Endoscopic surgery of the sick posterior urethra made it possible to
study the
structure of the removed tissues,
which have each time shown
sclerosis to a differing degree.
Since 1974 Doctor Georges Debled had shown that the anomalies of the
posterior urethra in man (the prostate) could be caused by
endocrinal disorders relating to the balance of the male hormones.
It was the same in the woman: the anomalies of the posterior urethra
can be caused by
endocrinal disorders relating to the balance of male hormones,
mainly dihydrotestosterone.
These endocrinal anomalies are also responsible for the disorders
associated with the andropause (andropause
disease)
or menopause
(menopause disease)
(1).
1. G. Debled G. The menopause
disease
(Androgenic Disease of Menopause).
A