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Peri menopause

 

 

 

                                               

                                        You're having hot flashes and periods. What gives? 

 These strategies can help you handle peri menopause.  

 

Just after her 40th birthday, you may begin to experience painful midcycle cramping. Then the ache in your belly seemed to shatter and spread. And over the next years you may suffer intermittent heart palpitations, weight gain,  achy joints, sleep disturbances, increased premenstrual  jitteriness, short term memory loss, free floating anxiety ( anxiety with no known trigger ) and frequent blushing -- all for no  reason you could fathom. The expert on menopause dismissed menopause as improbable through these symptoms. 

 

Actually what doctors call menopause and what women experience as menopause are not always one and the same. Rather it is  a single event that marks the end of woman's  monthly periods and reproductive life. It was what one menopause expert refers to as the changes before the change or technical jargon, the "Climacteric." 

 

During this stage, which is thought to commence at about the age of 35 your periods may flow like clockwork and you may be 15 years from full fledged menopause. But your ovaries begin to run out of the million or  so eggs you were born with and  the levels of  estrogen and progesterone in your body start to drop. The first noticeable indication? Often, it's  infertility. There may be other signs as well.

 

More Than just Hot Flashes 

 

Given that the climacteric has occurred since the dawn of time, it is surprising how little is actually known about it.  Indeed, we know more about the natural history of  AIDS than we do about a women transition to menopause. 

 

 Consequently, doctors may not associate achy joints, heart palpitations, free floating anxiety and other ailments with menopause primarily because this clutch of  symptoms doesn't support  the accepted medical model: that menopause equals estrogen deprivation. "In fact, it is found that many doctors are locked into  the mindset that if a condition is not  alleviated  by estrogen, it cannot have anything to do with menopause," says a prominent expert on menopause. 

 

Dr. Prior ( Associate Professor of medicine , University of British Columbia ) concurs. When she lectures to doctors, she routinely asks them how they would  treat a woman in her mid forties who suffers from frequent migraines, weight gain, breast swelling and night sweats, some of  these symptoms are the hallmark of high estrogen and some are associated with low estrogen, all are reported by women approaching menopause. 

 

"The responses I receive are pretty incredible", says Dr, Prior, whose hypothetical patient suffers from  some of the symptoms she herself is now experiencing as part  of the climacteric. Most physicians say they would refer the patient to  a counselor for emotional support, offer her a sedative or check her thyroid. In other words, most would assume that her problems are all imagined". 

 

They are not. Symptoms commonly associated with the  climacteric, such as joint  pain, sleep disturbances, memory loss, discomfort during sex, stress incontinence and  free  floating anxiety,  have their basis in biology, not  psychology and all of  them can be alleviated,  often with simple  measures. 

 

See next issue -- Simple measures to alleviate the symptoms of peri menopause

 


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