Medically Reviewed By: Dr Kori Feldman, M.D.

Bone loss accelerates around perimenopause and after menopause as estrogen levels drop. That’s why many women notice new aches, shrinking height, or DEXA scans showing osteopenia or osteoporosis. Bioidentical hormone replacement therapy (BHRT)—especially estrogen therapy, sometimes paired with progesterone—can slow bone loss and, for many women, help rebuild bone density over time. The goal is simple: reduce fracture risk while keeping you safe with the right dose, route, and monitoring plan.
Your bones are living tissue, constantly breaking down and rebuilding. Estrogen helps keep that cycle in balance. When estrogen drops at midlife, bone breakdown speeds up—leading to osteopenia or osteoporosis. Replacing estrogen to a healthy, individualized range can slow (and in some cases reverse) that trend.
We’ll also pair hormones with essentials that matter for bones at any age:
BHRT may not be appropriate if you have a history of estrogen-sensitive cancers, active liver disease, unexplained vaginal bleeding, a history of blood clots, stroke, or uncontrolled cardiovascular risk. Some women can still use local vaginal estrogen for genitourinary symptoms even when systemic therapy isn’t advised—this is something we individualize carefully. We’ll review your personal and family history, current medications, and recent screenings before recommending any plan.
We practice responsible, data-informed BHRT—using bioidentical hormones, careful baseline assessment, and ongoing monitoring. For women seeking “BHRT near me,” our team provides in-person and telehealth options (where permitted) and coordinates bone-smart nutrition, training, and lifestyle support alongside hormone care.
Dr. Feldman is a licensed, board-certified Family Medicine physician. She completed medical school at Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science in North Chicago.
Vitality Family Health & Wellness Partners is located in Oak Brook, Illinois, and serves patients throughout the Greater Chicagoland Area and the entire state of Illinois. These areas include but are not limited to the downtown Chicago area, surrounding suburbs, central, northern, and southern Illinois, and southern Wisconsin and Northwest Indiana.