Editorial label review
Winona side effects: weight gain
Primary formulary: Compounded bioidentical estradiol + progesterone (troche, cream, capsule); DHEA
Quick answer
Weight gain shows up on the FDA labels for the active ingredients Winona prescribes — Compounded bioidentical estradiol + progesterone (troche, cream, capsule). This page walks through the labelled frequency ranges, what to watch for, and when to call your clinician.
What Winona prescribes and why it matters for weight gain
Winona dispenses compounded bioidentical estradiol and progesterone in troche, cream, or capsule form; safety data draws from the FDA-approved active ingredients rather than the compounded product itself. Because Winona prescribes FDA-approved active ingredients, the labelled adverse-reaction tables from those medications describe the frequencies you should expect. Weight-change entries appear in every oral and transdermal estradiol PIL used by these telehealth programmes.
Common label-level side effects
Sourced from Section 6 (Adverse Reactions) of each FDA-approved PIL.
- Fluid retention causing 1–2 lb of early weight change, listed in the estradiol PIL Section 6 adverse-reaction table at 1–10% frequency
- Bloating and increased appetite, both documented in the Prometrium (micronized progesterone) PIL Section 6.1
- Weight changes that stabilise once dosing settles — clinical trials did not show sustained fat gain versus placebo
Serious label-level warnings
Drawn from Section 5 (Warnings and Precautions) of the FDA-approved PILs — including the estradiol boxed warning where applicable.
- Sudden weight gain paired with leg swelling, shortness of breath, or chest pain — potential venous thromboembolism per estradiol PIL boxed warning
- Rapid abdominal swelling with pain — flagged as a Section-5 warning for hepatic events on the estradiol label
When to contact your clinician
Call your clinician if you gain more than 5 lb in a week, notice one-sided leg swelling, or develop shortness of breath — the estradiol PIL requires prompt evaluation for possible thromboembolism.
Call 911 if you develop chest pain, one-sided weakness, sudden severe headache, vision or speech change, or shortness of breath — per the estradiol PIL boxed warning for cardiovascular events.
What to ask your provider
- “Which SKU in the Winona formulary am I on, and what is its labelled frequency for weight gain?”
- “Is my weight gainlikely a labelled adverse reaction, or something separate that needs its own workup?”
- “Would a different delivery route (patch vs. pill, oral vs. transdermal) change my expected frequency?”
- “What is the plan if weight gaindoes not settle within 2–3 cycles?”
Related editorial reading
- Full editorial review of Winona — formulary, pricing, and clinician model.
- Is weight gain caused by menopause itself? — how the transition presents on its own.
- Estradiol medication page — mechanism, dosing, and full PIL notes.
- Progesterone medication page — secondary ingredient in Winona's formulary.
- Browse all side-effect matrix pages — 4 brands × 15 symptoms.
Frequently asked questions
- How often does weight gain happen on Winona?
- Winona's primary regimen — Compounded bioidentical estradiol + progesterone (troche, cream, capsule); DHEA — carries the FDA-labelled adverse-reaction frequencies for weight gain described on this page. Ranges vary from < 1% to 45% depending on the specific active ingredient and delivery route. See the sources block for the exact PIL tables.
- When should I stop Winona because of weight gain?
- Talk to your clinician immediately if you meet any of the "when to contact" criteria on this page — most estradiol PIL Section 5 warnings require prompt reassessment. Do not stop hormone therapy without medical input; abrupt discontinuation can trigger rebound symptoms.
- Is weight gain on the FDA label for Winona's medications?
- Weight-change entries appear in every oral and transdermal estradiol PIL used by these telehealth programmes.
- Is weight gain caused by menopause itself?
- Weight gain can appear during the menopause transition for reasons unrelated to hormone therapy. Our /does-menopause-cause/weight-gain explainer covers what the underlying biology is and how clinicians disentangle the transition from the treatment.