CKai Aesthetics & Lashes

CKai Aesthetics & Lashes Health focused culturally and ethnically sensitive skin care & massage by advanced practice nurses using hypoallergenic, organic & cruelty free products.

Did you know, that Testosterone is one of the most abundant hormones in women and is essential to female health. A drop ...
04/22/2025

Did you know, that
Testosterone is one of the most abundant hormones in women and is essential to female health. A drop in testosterone can occur in many women starting as early as 20, with a significant reduction in testosterone production starting around age 35. Balancing testosterone can have wide-ranging benefits to a woman’s overall health and can be an essential component of preventative medicine. Restoring testosterone to optimal levels can help elevate mood, increase energy levels, improve muscle mass and definition, and help manage weight.

What happens to this hormone during menopause and how it can affect you

* Testosterone has a significant influence on libido but also brain processing
* Levels of this hormone drop during the perimenopause and menopause
* Some women find testosterone replacement can help to alleviate their symptoms

Testosterone is an important hormone. It’s often referred to as the “male hormone” but while men have higher circulating levels of testosterone than women, it’s the most abundant biologically active hormone in women.

Testosterone is produced by your ovaries, adrenal glands and the brain but, like with oestrogen, levels decline around the time of the perimenopause and menopause and stay low thereafter. This fall in testosterone can lead to a lack of energy, brain fog and reduced libido (s*x drive).

Testosterone plays a substantial role in a number of physiological processes in the brain. It strengthens nerves in the brain, and contributes to mental sharpness and clarity. It strengthens arteries that supply blood flow to the brain, which protects against loss of memory. It regulates serotonin levels and plays a role in its uptake in your brain, which helps improve overall mood. Testosterone also stimulates the release of dopamine, another neurotransmitter responsible for your feelings of pleasure.
Testosterone also helps with muscle mass and bone strength, cardiovascular health, and overall energy levels and quality of sleep.

What happens if I have low testosterone?
Levels of testosterone in women gradually decline as you enter your 30s but drop around the time of the perimenopause and menopause. If you have a surgical menopause (if you have your ovaries removed, or an operation or treatment that impacts ovarian function), you can experience a more sudden drop in hormones than women who go through naturally.
When your levels of testosterone reduce, you may find that you desire s*x less often and when you do have s*x, it’s not as enjoyable as it used to be (even when you still desire and love your partner). It’s normal to go through phases of less interest in s*x but if you have a total lack of interest, lasting for more than 6 months that has consequences on your relationship and/or self-esteem, you might be diagnosed with Hypoactive Sexual Desire Disorder (HSDD).

Other symptoms of lower testosterone include dysphoric mood (anxiety, irritability, depression), lack of wellbeing, physical fatigue, bone loss, muscle loss, changes in cognition, memory loss, insomnia, hot flashes, joint pains and urinary complaints including incontinence.

Do I need to replace my testosterone?
A low testosterone level alone does not necessarily mean replacement testosterone is needed.

The 2024 NICE Menopause guidelines say that testosterone can be considered for menopausal women with low s*xual desire – if HRT alone has not been effective [1]. The guidance does not mention or support the use of testosterone in any other circumstances yet there is good evidence to show that the benefits of testosterone could help many more women in their perimenopause and menopause.

One paper, Testosterone therapy in women: Myths and misconceptions, said “to assume that androgen deficiency does not exist in women, or that T therapy should not be considered in women, is unscientific and implausible.”

Menopause specialists and, increasingly, GPs are realising the widespread benefits of testosterone replacement for most women. NHS data suggests that 4,675 women aged 50 and over obtained testosterone gel using an NHS prescription in November 2022, a sharp increase from 429 women in November 2015, and this has been largely attributed to a rise in demand from female patients.

Testosterone can be considered soon after the onset of perimenopausal or menopausal symptoms, when you go to seek help for your symptoms. You do not usually need to have a blood test before treatment is started; your symptoms are enough of a guide for your doctor to agree to prescribe testosterone. Testosterone can be taken alongside oestrogen and progesterone.
Blood tests are needed a few months after starting testosterone treatment to ensure your levels are within the ‘female’ range. The dosage will be adjusted accordingly, depending on both your levels and whether you have ongoing symptoms of low testosterone. The blood tests can look at both the total testosterone levels in your body, and also the amount which is freely available by adding a SHBG level (s*x hormone binding globulin) to calculate your FAI (free androgen index).

How is testosterone treatment given?
Testosterone is usually given as a cream or gel, which you rub into your skin like a moisturiser. It is then absorbed directly into your bloodstream.

AndroFeme®1 cream is made for women. It is licensed in Australia but can be prescribed here and is a regulated preparation.

Testogel, Testim and Tostran are gels that are made for men but can be prescribed off licence and safely used in lower doses for women.

Your clinician will tell you how much testosterone to use. It should be rubbed onto clean, dry skin on your upper outer thigh or buttocks, it usually takes about 30 seconds to dry. You should wash your hands thoroughly after using it. Applying the cream or gel at the same time each day will have the best effect and help you remember to apply it. Avoid swimming or showering until around 30 minutes after application and initially avoid using perfume, deodorant or moisturising creams on the area.
Some menopause specialists give testosterone as an implant, which is a tiny pellet inserted under the skin that usually stays there for six months.

It can sometimes take a few months for the full effects of testosterone to work in your body, whether this is using the cream, gel or the implant.

Benefits of testosterone replacement
Many women find that taking testosterone as part of their HRT provides further improvements than taking oestrogen alone (with or without a progesterone). Benefits you might experience include:
* Increased libido and s*xual arousal levels
* Improved energy and stamina
* Improved muscle mass and strength
* Improved concentration, clarity of thought and memory
* Improved sleep

Newson Health carried out an audit in its clinics of 1,200 perimenopausal and postmenopausal women prescribed transdermal testosterone for at least three months. The audit found an improvement in symptoms associated with low libido, but the biggest symptom improvement was seen in mood and anxiety-related symptoms.

Humans and Carbs: A Complicated 800,000-Year RelationshipChristina SzalinskiOctober 28, 2024Trying to reduce your carboh...
10/30/2024

Humans and Carbs: A Complicated 800,000-Year Relationship

Christina Szalinski
October 28, 2024

Trying to reduce your carbohydrate intake means going against nearly a million years of evolution.

Humans are among a few species with multiple copies of certain genes that help us break down starch — carbs like potatoes, beans, corn, and grains — so that we can turn it into energy our bodies can use.

However, it’s been difficult for researchers to pinpoint when in human history we acquired multiple copies of these genes because they’re in a region of the genome that’s hard to sequence.

A recent study published in Science suggests that humans may have developed multiple copies of the gene for amylase — an enzyme that’s the first step in starch digestion — over 800,000 years ago, long before the agricultural revolution. This genetic change could have helped us adapt to eating starchy foods.

The study shows how “what your ancestors ate thousands of years ago could be affecting our genetics today,” commented Kelsey Jorgensen, PhD, a biological anthropologist at The University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas, who was not involved in the study.

The double-edged sword has sharpened over all those centuries. On one hand, the human body needs and craves carbs to function. On the other hand, our modern-day consumption of carbs, especially calorie-dense/nutritionally-barren processed carbs, has long since passed “healthy.”

How Researchers Found Our Carb-Lover Gene
The enzyme amylase turns complex carbs into maltose, a sweet-tasting sugar that is made of two glucose molecules linked together. We make two kinds of amylases: Salivary amylase that breaks down carbs in our mouths and pancreatic amylase that is secreted into our small intestines.

Modern humans have multiple copies of both amylases. Past research showed that human populations with diets high in starch can have up to nine copies of the gene for salivary amylase, called AMY1.

To pinpoint when in human history we acquired multiple copies of AMY1, the new study utilized novel techniques, called optical genome mapping and long-read sequencing, to sequence and analyze the genes. They sequenced 98 modern-day samples and 68 ancient DNA samples, including one from a Siberian person who lived 45,000 years ago.

The ancient DNA data in the study allowed the researchers to track how the number of amylase genes changed over time, said George Perry, PhD, an anthropological geneticist at The Pennsylvania State University-University Park (he was not involved in the study).

Based on the sequencing, the team analyzed changes in the genes in their samples to gauge evolutionary timelines. Perry noted that this was a “very clever approach to estimating the amylase copy number mutation rate, which in turn can really help in testing evolutionary hypotheses.”

The researchers found that even before farming, hunter-gatherers had between four and eight AMY1 genes in their cells. This suggests that people across Eurasia already had a number of these genes long before they started growing crops. (Recent research indicates that Neanderthals also ate starchy foods.)

“Even archaic hominins had these [genetic] variations and that indicates that they were consuming starch,” said Feyza Yilmaz, PhD, an associate computational scientist at The Jackson Laboratory in Bar Harbor, Maine, and a lead author of the study.

However, 4000 years ago, after the agricultural revolution, the research indicates that there were even more AMY1 copies acquired. Yilmaz noted, “with the advance of agriculture, we see an increase in high amylase copy number haplotypes. So genetic variation goes hand in hand with adaptation to the environment.”
A previous study showed that species that share an environment with humans, such as dogs and pigs, also have copy number variation of amylase genes, said Yilmaz, indicating a link between genome changes and an increase in starch consumption.

Potential Health Impacts on Modern Humans
The duplications in the AMY1 gene could have allowed humans to better digest starches. And it’s conceivable that having more copies of the gene means being able to break down starches even more efficiently, and those with more copies “may be more prone to having high blood sugar, prediabetes, that sort of thing,” Jorgensen said.

Whether those with more AMY1 genes have more health risks is an active area of research. “Researchers tested whether there’s a correlation between AMY1 gene copies and diabetes or BMI [body mass index]. And so far, some studies show that there is indeed correlation, but other studies show that there is no correlation at all,” said Yilmaz.

Yilmaz pointed out that only 5 or 10% of carb digestion happens in our mouths, the rest occurs in our small intestine, plus there are many other factors involved in eating and metabolism.
“I am really looking forward to seeing studies which truly figure out the connection between AMY1 copy number and metabolic health and also what type of factors play a role in metabolic health,” said Yilmaz.

It’s also possible that having more AMY1 copies could lead to more carb cravings as the enzyme creates a type of sugar in our mouths. “Previous studies show that there’s a correlation between AMY1 copy number and also the amylase enzyme levels, so the faster we process the starch, the taste [of starches] will be sweeter,” said Yilmaz.

However, the link between cravings and copy numbers isn’t clear. And we don’t exactly know what came first — did the starch in humans’ diet lead to more copies of amylase genes, or did the copies of the amylase genes drive cravings that lead us to cultivate more carbs? We’ll need more research to find out.

How Will Today’s Processed Carbs Affect Our Genes Tomorrow?

As our diet changes to increasingly include processed carbs, what will happen to our AMY1genes is fuzzy. “I don’t know what this could do to our genomes in the next 1000 years or more than 1000 years,” Yilmaz noted, but she said from the evidence it seems as though we may have peaked in AMY1 copies.

Jorgensen noted that this research is focused on a European population. She wonders whether the pattern of AMY1 duplication will be repeated in other populations “because the rise of starch happened first in the Middle East and then Europe and then later in the Americas,” she said.

“There’s individual variation and then there’s population-wide variation,” Jorgensen pointed out. She speculates that the historical diet of different cultures could explain population-based variations in AMY1 genes — it’s something future research could investigate. Other populations may also experience genetic changes as much of the world shifts to a more carb-heavy Western diet.

Overall, this research adds to the growing evidence that humans have a long history of loving carbs — for better and, at least over our most recent history and immediate future, for worse.

Explaining your cholesterol numbers.
07/31/2023

Explaining your cholesterol numbers.

Ever wonder what the numbers of your cholesterol mean? Get a simple primer, plus tips to help you keep it in check.

We’ve added weightloss and wellness Please call or text us to set up your appointment to discuss your options.  916)437-...
03/27/2023

We’ve added weightloss and wellness

Please call or text us to set up your appointment to discuss your options.
916)437-4319

Real people who’ve lost weight; not models or artificial intelligence.

Love the skin your in.  C’Kai Aesthetics, trained in the treatment of all skin types.    We are experts in the treatment...
04/27/2021

Love the skin your in. C’Kai Aesthetics, trained in the treatment of all skin types. We are experts in the treatment of acne, eczema, psoriasis, rosacea and chronic skin ailments.

Our Motto: Honesty, Integrity, and RESULTS!

Call us today to schedule your complementary consultation.

C’Kai Medical Aesthetics
1620 35th Ave Suite C
Sacramento, Ca 95822
916)437-4319 Office
916)595-8555 Cell














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04/16/2020
C’Kai Luxury Lash Winter Sale916)595-8555 Text For AppointmentFull Set of Classic Lashes $55Full Set of Volume Lashes $6...
10/08/2019

C’Kai Luxury Lash Winter Sale
916)595-8555 Text For Appointment

Full Set of Classic Lashes $55
Full Set of Volume Lashes $65

Lash & Facial Combos
**Classic Lashes & Hydration Facial - Full $100 / Fill $70

**2D/3D Volume & Hydration Facial - Full $120 / Fill $75

**Russian Volume 4D/5D & Rejuvenation Facial - Full $140 / Fill $80

Extension Removal $35
Lash Curl and Wash $35

** Ask us about a lash combo with anti hyperpigmentation or acne facial

Don’t miss out on this amazing winter deal! Call to set up your appointment today. Special running ALL winter long!

Not valid with any other coupon or discount, gift certificate, gift card, spafinder or spawish.

C’Kai Aesthetics & Lashes
1620 35th Ave Suite C
Sacramento, Ca 95822
916)595-8555 Text For Appointment
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Love the skin your in. C’Kai Aesthetics, expert in all skin types.  Honesty, Integrity, RESULTS! YES! We do lashes, want...
09/18/2019

Love the skin your in. C’Kai Aesthetics, expert in all skin types. Honesty, Integrity, RESULTS!

YES! We do lashes, want to be a model? Text us and we’ll chat!

Call us today to schedule your complementary consultation.

C’Kai Aesthetics
1620 35th Ave Suite C
Sacramento, Ca 95822
916)393-3673 Office
916)595-8555 Cell














Makeup Removal







Mrs Cecily Tyson!!!! In the issue, Tyson opens about her 60-plus year acting career, from her film debut in 'Carib Gold'...
09/12/2019

Mrs Cecily Tyson!!!!

In the issue, Tyson opens about her 60-plus year acting career, from her film debut in 'Carib Gold' in 1956, to her most recent work as Annalise Keating's mother in ABC's 'How to Get Away with Murder.' Known for only accepting non-stereotypical roles and paving the way for generations of Black actresses, TIME asked Tyson to recall a moment that she was told that her art made an impact on others.

We had an AMAZING time at the annual cincenera and wedding expo. Loved seeing the beautiful young women and men C’Kai Ae...
09/09/2019

We had an AMAZING time at the annual cincenera and wedding expo. Loved seeing the beautiful young women and men C’Kai Aesthetics has worked with in preparation for this event.

Love the skin your in. C’Kai Aesthetics, expert in all skin types. Honesty, Integrity, RESULTS!

Call us today to schedule your complementary consultation.

C’Kai Aesthetics
1620 35th Ave Suite C
Sacramento, Ca 95822
916)393-3673 Office
916)595-8555 Cell

Love the skin your in. C’Kai Aesthetics, expert in all skin types.  Honesty, Integrity, RESULTS! Call us today to schedu...
09/06/2019

Love the skin your in. C’Kai Aesthetics, expert in all skin types. Honesty, Integrity, RESULTS!

Call us today to schedule your complementary consultation.

C’Kai Aesthetics
1620 35th Ave Suite C
Sacramento, Ca 95822
916)393-3673 Office
916)595-8555 Cell

Love the skin your in. C’Kai Aesthetics, honesty, integrity, RESULTS! Call us today to schedule your complementary consu...
08/23/2019

Love the skin your in. C’Kai Aesthetics, honesty, integrity, RESULTS! Call us today to schedule your complementary consultation.

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C’Kai Aesthetics & Medical Massage

C'Kai Aesthetics & Massage, is a professional medical massage and advanced skin care day salon owned and operated by registered and advanced practice nurses. At C'Kai Aesthetics & Massage, we believe that our patients and their individual needs come first. C'Kai takes extra steps to ensure that our patient's health and safety is never compromised. We are certified acne skin care specialist, expert in the removal and treatment of problematic acne, psoriasis, eczema, rosacea, dark spots, acne scars, melasma, hyperpigmentation and nonsurgical wrinkle removal. Our nurse specialists are also oncology aesthetics certified and work hard to get to know our patients to find the most effective best practice treatments available to remedy your skincare needs. We employ a master masseuse who is certified in medical massage, oncology massage, lymphatic massage, and massage of patients with chronic medical concerns such as hypertension, lymphedema, stroke, diabetes, heart failure, and COPD. Contact us today, we can help. We speak Thai, Laotian, Vietnamese and Chinese. 916)437-4319 / www.ckaispa.com