A Holistic Take on Hormonal Health: Insights from Dr. Lara Williams

Written by Sarah Boyles

On July 16, 2025
menopause and hormones, A New Perspective on Hormones: Insights from Dr. Lara Williams

A New Perspective on Hormones: Insights from Dr. Lara Williams

Blending Western and Integrative Medicine 

As Dr. Lara Williams explains, her unique training, from OB/GYN fellowship to certifications in functional, restorative, and integrative medicine, gives her a rare, dual-lens approach. More than just treating disease, she aims to prevent it. This resonates deeply with me: we must have more tools than just pills to address body-wide symptoms. thewomensbladderdoctor.com+13Buzzsprout+13Apple Podcasts+13

Common Middle-Age Symptoms Need a Bigger Investigation 

Take the 44-year-old with brain fog, bladder irritation, negative cultures, and fatigue. The first question isn’t automatically “Let’s give estrogen,” but “What’s going on beneath the surface?” Dr. Williams emphasizes the importance of assessing sleep patterns, stress, iron, thyroid function, vitamin D, cortisol, and hormones (FSH, estradiol, testosterone),.So many of our symptoms are related to our habits like sleep, exercise, diet and stress. Treating with estrogen in all is not the answer.  It’s a powerful reminder: symptoms require careful thought and subsequent evaluation .

Cortisol Fix Is Often First 

One of her major revelations: Cortisol levels drop first in response to stress, not estrogen. She describes stages of “adrenal downregulation”: from adrenaline-driven energy to debilitating fatigue.
Dr. Williams uses cortisol tests and sleep tracking—frequent monitoring via devices like Fitbit or Apple Watch, then implements targeted lifestyle adjustments. That counters the belief that tiredness = hormone need.  Traditional western medicine does not evaluate cortisol in this fashion.

Correcting Misleading Lab “Normals” 

Pairing labs with symptoms, she looks for low ferritin (~9‑15), ureaplasmacolonization, or mild  thyroid shifts not flagged “abnormal.” These are incredibly common in midlife and highly treatable.She describes  how boosting iron lifts fatigue and urinary symptoms for many people. It reminds us: normal labs ≠ healthy function.

Hormone Nuance in Perimenopause & Menopause 

Dr. Williams follows evidence-based protocols: early perimenopause often needs progesterone first (since estrogen can be high), while menopause-phase labs guide estrogen/testosterone dosing. She avoids hormone pellets, opting for cyclical dosing that mirrors biology. And she doesn’t prescribe birth control pills as standard; they often deliver more hormones than hormone replacement therapy.

Take‑Home Action for Your Health 

  1. Sleep & Stress first – Track sleep and daytime stress points.

  1. Lifestyle priority – Build recovery routines: no doom-scrolling; plan rest; nourish with protein, water, fiber; limit alcohol & sugar.

  2. Strategic supplementation – Iron, vitamin D, magnesium, targeted botanicals; no overreliance on hormones.

  3. Re-test & adjust – Periodically repeat labs to stay on course.

Why This Matters to You 

Women in their 40s and 50s often hear “you’re perimenopausal” and are tols there is nothing to do. But here’s the thing: symptoms like brain fog or bladder irritation may be caused by lifestyle or functional issues. Dr. Williams’s approach is empowering. It says: “You belong at the center of the process, examining labs, behaviors, environment.’’

Final Thoughts 

As Dr. Williams says, there’s no magic pill, but body-wide change is achievable. It reminds me of everything I’ve shared on this blog: behavior matters, lab interpretation matters, and hormones matter, if used wisely and in context.

 

 

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