Menopause is a natural transition, but its symptoms don't have to control your life. We offer comprehensive, naturopathic approaches to help you navigate this change with comfort and confidence. Our clinic is conveniently located near Scottsdale in Chandler, AZ, offering patients from Scottsdale access to advanced, non-surgical treatment options.
Scottsdale residents typically reach our office in 25–35 minutes via the Loop 101 Pima Freeway south to the Loop 202. Scottsdale patients are often serious recreational golfers, hikers from the McDowell Preserve, and an aesthetics- and longevity-focused demographic seeking hormone optimization, regenerative orthopedics, and integrative anti-aging care.
Scottsdale has one of the densest concentrations of premium golf courses in the country — TPC Scottsdale, Troon North, Grayhawk, and Silverleaf among them — plus hiking at Pinnacle Peak and Tom's Thumb, road cycling out of north Scottsdale, and a strong boutique fitness, Pilates, and yoga ecosystem in Old Town and DC Ranch.
We regularly see patients from Old Town, DC Ranch, McCormick Ranch, Grayhawk, Troon, and Gainey Ranch.
Menopause patients typically present in three patterns: (1) women in perimenopause (often 40–50) with disrupted cycles, sleep, and mood but who haven't yet been told they're 'in menopause'; (2) post-menopausal women dealing with persistent hot flashes, sleep disruption, and vaginal or urinary symptoms; and (3) women with surgical or premature menopause needing thoughtful long-term hormone support.
Patients from Scottsdale benefit from a short drive (about 25 minutes) to our Chandler clinic for comprehensive menopause care.
Vasomotor symptoms and night sweats are often what drives patients to seek care first, and they typically respond well to thoughtful HRT.
Loss of lean muscle and bone density accelerates after menopause; resistance training plus appropriate hormone support is the most protective combination we know of.
Midlife weight gain and insulin resistance often track with hormonal changes; addressing them together is more effective than diet alone.
Brain fog, mood changes, and anxiety are real symptoms of hormonal transition, not personal failings, and they often respond to appropriate care.
Hormone therapy for symptomatic women near menopause has strong evidence for vasomotor symptom relief, sleep, mood, and bone protection. The original Women's Health Initiative data, which raised broader fears, has been substantially re-evaluated based on age and timing of initiation.
Perimenopause is the multi-year transition leading up to your final period — hormones fluctuate dramatically, and symptoms often start here. Menopause is technically the point you've gone 12 months without a period; everything after that is postmenopause.
For most healthy women starting therapy near the time of menopause, modern HRT — particularly transdermal estradiol and oral micronized progesterone — has a favorable risk profile and meaningful benefits. Risk is more nuanced for women starting later or with specific medical histories, which is why individual evaluation matters.
Estrogen therapy is the most effective treatment we have for vasomotor symptoms. For women who can't or don't want hormones, options include certain SSRIs, gabapentin, and lifestyle and botanical strategies that may help — though typically less dramatically.
Estrogen has well-established protective effects on bone density when started near menopause. Cognitive and cardiovascular benefits appear to be timing-dependent — typically more protective when started in the early menopause window than years later.
We treat the underlying problem, not just symptoms.
Your treatment plan is based on what works, not what's covered.
Scottsdale residents typically reach our office in 25–35 minutes via the Loop 101 Pima Freeway south to the Loop 202.
Led by Dr. Kelly Romero, NMD, with a team of specialists.
Book a free 30-minute consultation. We'll review your history, discuss your goals, and recommend the right treatment plan.