There wasn't any mention from pastie supper of having regular TVS scans there, and seeing she's previously said her GP is unsupportive, I can't see that being realistic either.
Hi Joziel, I said it somewhere, I'm trying to not repeat myself too much, but yes, the annual scans are part of the plan. I already have trialled 100mg vaginal utrogestan then been scanned and my lining was thin and smooth on this dose, nothing to report at all.
I bled for four days only which is nice, the further post menopause I get, the less I am bleeding anyway, but this time it was likely because I took less progesterone. I'll take it for 12 days next time, washing it out after half an hour makes a difference to the side effects so it is reducing the dose and probably why I bled while still taking it, I was leaving it there for the first few days, so getting a higher dose, then dropping that dose made me bleed only four days instead of five or six.
Hurdity, you are right, this is not a place where should we tell each other what to do. I completely agree, we are all adults capable of making our own decisions (wish someone would tell my GP that!).
It's a place to have an honest adult conversation with other women in their early fifties, or otherwise recently menopausal and compare notes. If people don't say what they genuinely think then it's not so useful. I don't feel obliged to take any particular action based on what anyone else said here, I welcome all suggestions, ideas and food for thought in general.
I'm not a fan of hiding information or opinions just in case a stereotypical woman comes along who would be assumed incapable of understanding things properly. That drives useful conversations into private messages and potentially everyone else misses out on learning something. Besides there haven't been sufficient studies done to know anything with certainty about dosing utrogestan with oestrogel. I'm looking for any studies that compare doses and ROA of those two specific medicines.
Thank you all for your replies, it's lovely to know this support is out there. MaryG and Penguin especially, you really seem to understand which I can only interpret as you experiencing the same ill effects from progesterone as I do. Someday they will find out that women who have some particle x,y or z in their blood or brains are always going to go crazy on progesterone and they'll find a way to solve it. However it seems as low down the list of world health priorities as it's possible to be, shame that.
I'm not sure anyone can comprehend how completely it hijacks your brain and body unless they've experienced it. Although all women know hormonal fluctuations, progesterone is very differently experienced by 5-10% of women, a lot of scientists say that. About a third of the "different" women feel positively wonderful on it (or wonderfully positive

). The other two thirds of the "different" women hate it because it totally destroys their lives.