Tuesday, October 9, 2018

Friday, October 5, 2018

CUTV News Radio welcomes back Dr. Victoria Mondloch




Waukesha, WI – Dr. Victoria Mondloch is a practicing physician with over 30 years of experience specializing in women’s health, family medicine and preventive health and wellness. An OBGYN by training, today Dr. Mondloch describes herself as a wellness physician, partnering with her patients to deliver the best healthcare possible.
According to Dr. Mondloch, the foundation of health is hormonal balance, which traditional western medicine too often ignores, overlooks or outright dismisses. Dr. Mondloch says hormones should be the first thing we examine.
This is especially important for young adolescent girls entering puberty, but pediatrician offices are not set up to adequately meet the adolescent’s needs. They need to feel not only engaged, but listened to, and above all, educated.
“My shift in approach is that I feel nobody addresses or educates the adolescent,” says Dr. Mondloch. “So many physicians don’t take the time to educate them or their mothers, but who else is going to teach a young girl who has just had her first period about hormones?”
That’s why Dr. Mondloch wrote Blossoming: Becoming a Woman, an owner’s manual for the transition from young adult to womanhood. Blossoming offers mothers and daughters the groundbreaking truth about becoming a woman that they won’t find on the internet.
“I want every woman, every mom and their adolescent daughter, to understand that there’s a resource they can go to,” says Dr. Mondloch. “If this book doesn’t help, they can go to their gynecologist, and if the gynecologist doesn’t help, they can contact me directly.”
For more information on Dr. Victoria Mondloch, visit www.victoriajmondlochmdsc.com

Monday, August 20, 2018

Estrogen Facts And Trivia To Know

Estrogen can both be a blessing and a curse, and there should be awareness of how it works in the female body where it can be in lacking or excessive amounts. The term refers to a group of hormones playing an important role in the growth and development of female sexual traits as well as the reproductive process, and these compounds include estradiol, estrone, and estriol. Here are some estrogen facts and trivia to discover.
Image source: Pixabay.com  


Estrogen plays an essential role in the onset and growth of female secondary sexual characteristics ranging from breasts to pubic hair to menstrual cycle regulation. During the menstrual cycle, these hormones produce an environment conducive to an early embryo’s fertilization, implantation, as well as nourishment.

Did you know that it can also affect your sun sensitivity? Being on estrogen can make skin more vulnerable to the sun as well as tanning beds, and this may result in burning or freckling more easily. Estrogen also directly and indirectly affects the cardiovascular system, such as helping prevent the development of atherosclerosis, or the buildup of plaque in the arteries.

Hormone disorders often involve appropriate estrogen therapy. Reasons for this treatment include delayed puberty, contraception, irregular menstrual periods, and menopausal symptoms. There are pitfalls that can result from hormone imbalance, such as estrogen dominance. These health issues include polycystic ovary disease, endometriosis, recurring ovarian cysts, and more, requiring vigilance and working with a qualified health practitioner if estrogen levels are suspected to be off in any way.
Image source: Pixabay.com  


Dr. Victoria Mondloch has more than two decades of experience specializing in women’s health, family medicine, and preventive health and wellness. Her independent practice enables her to take care of the patients with concerns regarding sending them for tests, referrals, and services that will best work for their needs. Learn more on this page.

Friday, July 27, 2018

Stem Cell For Chronic Back Pain: Young Yet Promising Science

Image source: osoc.com
Stem cell treatment and therapy promise to bring relief to millions of individuals suffering from chronic lower back pain. Physicians and scientists have been looking for a treatment that can replace opioids, as overdoses from prescription have quadrupled since 1999.

In 2015 alone, 33,000 deaths were attributed to opioids overdose. The deaths were a result of addiction to prescribed drugs like oxycodone, methadone, and hydrocodone, all of which provide relief for lower back pain. Chronic back pain is a common health concern in the US, and it is responsible for about half of all the opioid painkiller prescriptions in the country. Such unfortunate circumstances can be turned around by recourse to stem cells.

Stem cells are injected to damaged discs between the vertebrae of the spine, with each dose containing approximately 6 million cells. These mesenchymal precursor cells reduce inflammation and secrete factors which rebuild the damaged tissue. Trials to treat health issues such as degenerative disc disease—responsible for 22 percent of cases of chronic lower back pain— have shown positive results.

Image source: apmhealth.com
The discs between the body’s vertebrae act as shock absorbers. They can, however, dry out as a result of ageing or wear and tear. They shrink, resulting in the reduction of their ability to serve as cushion. This then leads to trapped nerves. Also aggravating the condition is disc injury that triggers inflammation.

Stem cell treatment and technology promise great results. Stem cell for chronic back pain is a concept with much potential that is being explored.

Dr. Victoria J. Mondloch is a Wisconsin-based physician. She currently holds free and educational lectures regarding joint pain and intra-articular stem cell injections. Learn more about Dr. Victoria J. Mondloch’s practice by subscribing to this blog.




Monday, June 18, 2018

Who Benefits From Hormone Therapy?

Hormone therapy, an approved treatment for relieving menopausal symptoms and prevention of conditions such as osteoporosis, can provide radically important benefits to specific groups of patients.

Image source: Pixabay.com

Hormone therapy seeks to increase specific hormone levels in the body that have dropped with age and other circumstances. Therapy is generally provided as systemic products circulating throughout the bloodstream and other body parts (as oral tablet, path, gel, etc) or as non-systemic products affecting specific areas (as cream, ring, or tablet).

Menopausal women
Estrogen treatment is facilitated to control issues such as mood swings, hot flashes, vaginal dryness, weight gain, and night sweats experienced after menopause. The benefits can include improved sleep, sexual health, and overall quality of life.

Growth hormone deficiency patients
HGH injections offer positive results such as tighter and firmer skin, stronger nails, shorter recovery time, and enhanced immunity.

Hormone imbalance patients
An excess of estrogen, dubbed estrogen dominance, can lead to frightening symptoms and conditions from endometriosis and recurrent ovarian cysts to uterine fibroids and abnormal mammograms/pre-cancer of the breast. Hormone therapy can address the imbalance that can occur from puberty to peri-menopause.

These are just some groups that can benefit from hormone therapy, which recognizes that one’s levels of the female hormone dubbed the “elixir of life” and allows reproduction to take its course can go off-track at one point. Use of hormone therapy should be individualized, and to be continued or discontinued based on joint decision-making by the patient and her healthcare provider.

Image source: Pixabay.com

Dr. Victoria J. Mondloch is a practicing physician based in Wisconsin and has years of experience specializing in women’s health, family medicine, and preventive health and wellness that serve as the pillar of her independent practice. Learn more about these areas of medicine on this page.

Monday, May 28, 2018

Foundation Of Health: Why You Should Value Hormone Balance

Hormones are vital for to the body’s correct functioning. Some experts consider hormones as the foundation of health; if the foundations are not stable, building health with the food taken, sleep and exercise performed, and supplements received would be impossible. These are extremely varied chemical substances that regulate a number of biological mechanisms. The adrenal glands, thyroid glands, pituitary glands, pancreas, ovaries, and testicles secrete hormones.

Image source: bockintegrative.com


While many still think about male or female hormones such as estrogen, testosterone, and progesterone, numerous others affect one’s health. These other hormones are cortisol, the stress hormone; thyroid hormones, which affect mood, energy, and weight; and insulin, which is in charge of blood sugars and is highly inflammatory to the body in high levels. As these hormones are part of the endocrine system, a deficiency or imbalance in any of them can have an impact on the other hormones as well.

Hormones are released into the bloodstream and go on to contact with target cells in various areas of the body where they produce their effects. They alter cell activity by causing a sequence of reactions that lead to particular effects, usually complex ones, most often through speeding up or slowing down normal biological processes. A physician aims to balance a patient’s blood sugar and sex hormones, lower inflammation by maintaining inflammatory hormones like cortisol and insulin in balance, and ensure the thyroid hormones are stable, as it impacts energy and weight. A close look at one’s nutrition, exercise regimens, sleeping methods, and methods of managing stress are done to educate patients on their long-term health.

Image source: bockintegrative.com



Dr. Victoria J. Mondloch is a practicing physician based in Wisconsin. She has been specializing in women’s health, family medicine, and preventive health and wellness for more than 25 years. For more about Dr. Mondloch, click here.

Tuesday, May 1, 2018

All You Need To Know About Lumbar Spinal Stenosis

In adults 50 years and older, lumbar spinal stenosis is a common cause of lower back, buttock, and leg pain. It’s a condition wherein either the spinal canal (central stenosis) or one or more of the vertebral foramina (foraminal stenosis) starts to become narrowed.

Image source: orthospinenews.com

Typically caused by degenerative arthritis, low back pain along with pain, weakness, and numbness or decreased sensation in the legs can be developed in patients. Lumbar spinal stenosis usually occurs when bone or tissue, or both, grow in the openings in the spinal bones. The growth can press and irritate the nerves that extend from the spinal cord. 

As people age, there can be changes that can happen such as connective tissues, also referred to as ligaments, get thicker; arthritis which leads to the growth of bony spurs that push on the nerves that extend from the spinal cord; and the discs between the bones being forced backward into the spinal canal. Its symptoms get worse when an individual starts to walk, stand straight, or lean backward. The pain is alleviated when one sits down or bends forward. 

While low back pain and stiffness in the legs and thighs are experienced by many who suffer from lumbar spinal stenosis, extreme cases can mean loss of bladder and bowel control. Symptoms may be severe occasionally and not as bad at other times. Most individuals aren’t severely disabled, and many don’t have symptoms at all. Imaging tests such as x-ray, MRI, CT scan will be needed for its diagnosis. Mild to moderate symptoms can be controlled with pain medicines, exercise, and physical therapy. In some cases, a doctor can give a patient a spinal shot of corticosteroid, a medication that reduces inflammation. 

Image source: coreem.net

Dr. Victoria J. M0ndloch aspires to empower patients by working together on medical diagnoses and educating them on the best steps to stay healthy. To learn about Dr. Mondloch’s practice, visit this page.