The Symptoms of Menopause – What You Can Expect

If you’re just now entering menopause or approaching that age, you’ve probably started wondering if all the rumors are about hot flashes, loss of libido, and weight gain are true. Certainly they’re exaggerated, right? Well, there’s always hope. For most women, though, at least a few of the typical symptoms of menopause do show up. Here’s a little of what you can expect as you enter menopause.

Irregular periods

This is usually the first and probably the most obvious sign that something about your hormone levels has changed. Women going through menopause and perimenopause may experience missing or more frequent periods, heavy periods, longer periods or a combination. Like menarche, it’s largely an individual thing, though what your mother experienced can give you some indication of what’s in store for you.

Hot flashes and night sweats

The butt of so many menopause jokes and cartoons, hot flashes and night sweats are one of the better known symptoms of menopause, yet few women know exactly what causes them.

During menopause, your hormone levels become unbalanced and this fools your body’s heat-regulating system into thinking you’re too warm. To dispel this extra warmth, your body sends out signals to increase your heart rate and open your sweat glands, giving you a rush of heat and perspiration.

Vaginal dryness

Estrogen is what keeps the membranes in your vaginal area moist, supple, and at a pH level that wards of bacterial infection. With less estrogen in your body, these membranes dry out and become thinner. Not only is it uncomfortable, it also puts you at greater risk for yeast and urinary tract infections.

Weight gain

Weight gain around the stomach area is another common problem many women deal with during and after menopause. Less estrogen is being produced in the usual manner, your body starts looking for other ways to create it. Since body fat is the next best place to create estrogen, your body starts deliberately packing on more fat as a way to pick up your falling estrogen levels.

Another cause is water retention. This leads to edema (swelling) in the legs, arms and abdomen. While physical changes do play a part, poor diet and a sedentary lifestyle don’t exactly help.

Bladder control problems

One of the most frustrating symptoms of menopause is frequent urination and a weak bladder. This problem comes from the fact that estrogen also helps keep the lining of the bladder and the urethra healthy. Without enough estrogen, these muscles weaken can you end up with a bladder control problem.

Sound like enough problems? Well, unfortunately, this isn’t a complete list. Some women also experience thinning hair, facial hair growth, trouble sleeping (a major problem for many), and mood swings. The good news, though, is that all of these symptoms have proven-effective natural treatments available that can help reduce the discomfort and inconvenience they cause. These include things like herbal remedies that support the female reproductive system, stress-management techniques like meditation, and natural hormone replacement treatments made from plant estrogens.


Other sites that may interest you

Menopause: MedlinePlus Medical Encyclopedia
Menopause - Wikipedia the free encyclopedia
The Menopausal Patient And Hormone Replacement Therapy


Natural Progesterone And Hot Flushes

Natural Progesterone And Hot Flushes

Natural progesterone and hot flushes. How in the world could they possibly be related?

You’ve heard about them for years. Your mother, grandmother, aunts or neighbor ladies have most likely all offered their personal, and animated, descriptions. When a woman gets close to “the change”, she may expect to experience the dreaded hot flushes (hot flashes). They’re “sneaky”, merciless, unforgiving and indiscriminate. They attack with little or no prior warning (other than your heart feeling as if it’s about to beat through your chest), often at the most inopportune times, and causing affected women to feel flush (reddening of the skin surface), overheated, dizzy, sweaty, and weak. According to personal accounts, hot flushes can be miserable experiences, often viewed as having no recourse for prevention or relief.

A majority of women can experience hot flushes (flashes) as they approach menopause. The condition is actually caused by a drop in the level of estrogen in a woman’s body. The decreased level of estrogen somehow affects the hypothalamus, the part of a woman’s brain which regulates such things as sleep, appetite, sex hormones, and body temperature.

With the drop in estrogen, the hypothalamus misinterprets signals and believes the body to be overheating. It then sends messages to other parts of the body; the nervous system, heart, blood vessels, that causes them to act in such a way as to reduce the body’s “overheatedness”. Consequently the heart pumps faster as the blood vessels widen, moving the flow of blood more quickly, in an effort to release heat from the body and cool the body’s system.

Simultaneously, the sweat glands are activated to produce sweat, further advancing the cooling process. And this would be okay, if your body was overheated in the first place, but when it isn’t and the above takes place, the experience is usually one of physical overheating where the body temperature actually rises and then falls, sometimes causing a “chilled” effect. These “episodes” can last from a very brief few seconds to a considerably longer period of time. The length and intensity of hot flushes (flashes) can vary, depending on a number of factors, including medications a woman may be taking, general health, stage of peri-menopause or menopause, whether a woman has experienced a hysterectomy, etc.

So what do natural progesterone and hot flushes have to do with one another?

One of the ways a woman may avoid hot flushes is with the use of natural progesterone. If her hot flushes are not a result of stress related issues or medicine she’s taking as a part of medical treatment, it is likely that she is experiencing a hormonal imbalance of which the hot flushes are a symptom. Natural progesterone can be used as a means of returning a woman’s body to a natural flow. By replacing low levels of natural progesterone in the body, and as a result, the natural balance between estrogen and other hormones, it is quite possible that hot flushes can be reduced or eliminated altogether.


Other sites that may interest you

Premature ovarian failure - Wikipedia the free encyclopedia
Menopause and Depression - U-M Depression Center
Menopause (journal) - Wikipedia the free encyclopedia