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Also known as: Premarin, CEE, conjugated equine oestrogens
A mixture of oestrogen compounds derived from the urine of pregnant mares. One of the most widely studied oestrogen preparations, though largely replaced in the UK by body-identical options. Still prescribed in some cases, including for women post-hysterectomy.
This page contains self-reported experiences from the Narrated community — not clinical data. Outcomes are subjective. Always consult your GP or specialist before starting, stopping, or changing any intervention.
Regulatory status does not mean an intervention is safe or unsafe. Laws vary by country — check your local regulations.
0 reports from women who tried Conjugated Estrogens
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Research context compiled from published sources
Contains a mixture of oestrogen sulphates (predominantly oestrone sulphate plus equine-specific oestrogens) which are converted to active oestrogens after oral absorption. Acts on oestrogen receptors throughout the body to relieve menopausal symptoms and protect bone density.
Well Studied
Extensive human research over many years, including randomized controlled trials.
Well Characterized
Decades of long-term safety data available from human use.
Dose ranges from published research. Individual dosing should be determined with your healthcare provider based on your specific circumstances.
Factual research context from published sources — not a safety assessment or recommendation. Research classifications may change as new data emerges.
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