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Hormone Replacement Therapy Hormone replacement therapy (HRT) is a system of medical treatment for postmenopausal women, based on the assumption that it may prevent health problems caused by diminished circulating estrogen hormones. The treatment involves a series of drugs designed to artificially boost hormone levels. Estrogens and progestagens are the two main types of hormones involved.
Hormone Replacement Therapy (Trans) Hormone replacement therapy (HRT) for transgender and transsexual people replaces the hormones naturally occurring in their bodies with those of the other sex. Its purpose is to cause the development of the secondary sexual characteristics of the desired gender. It can not undo the changes produced by the first natural occurring puberty of transgender people, this is done by sexual reassignment surgery and for transwomen by epilation. Some intersex people also receive HRT, either starting in childhood to confirm the gender they were assigned, or later, if this assigment has proven to be incorrect.
Nicotine Replacement Therapy Nicotine replacement therapy(NRT) is the use of various forms of nicotine delivery methods intended to replace nicotine obtained from smoking or other tobacco usage.
Bioidentical Hormone Replacement Therapy Bioidendical hormone replacement therapy is the use of supplemental doses of naturally occurring sex steroid hormones. This is a modification of conventional hormone replacement therapy. Conventional hormone replacement therapy often involves the use of chemicals that have hormone activity but are not normally found in the human body (examples: synthetic progestins, equilin).
Opiate Replacement Therapy Opiate Replacement Therapy (ORT) is the medical procedure of replacing an illegal opiate drug such as heroin with a longer acting but less euphoric opiate such as methadone or buprenorphine. Drugs such as buprenorphine are manufactured in pill form with the opiate antagonist Naloxone to prevent addicts from crushing the tablets and injecting them instead of taking them sublingually (under the tongue). The driving principle behind ORT is that an opiate addict will be able to regain a normal life and schedule by dosing themselves with a pill that stops them from experiencing withdrawal symptoms, but doesn't provide radical euphoria that drugs like heroin do. The theory behind use of ORT is that as a result, addicts will live normal lives.