Sexual Health
When does a woman usually experience menopause? Four signs indicate that the disease has arrived
Amenorrhea is a condition where menstruation does not occur, and it can also be divided into normal amenorrhea and diseased amenorrhea. Especially in abnormal situations, we should pay attention to them. Moreover, women have premonitions before amenorrhea, which need to be taken seriously. Let's take a look together.
What is amenorrhea
Amenorrhea is a common symptom in gynecological diseases, which can be caused by various reasons. Amenorrhea is usually divided into two types: primary and secondary. Individuals aged 18 and above who have not undergone menstruation are referred to as primary amenorrhea. At any time before normal amenorrhea (except during pregnancy or lactation), those with amenorrhea exceeding 6 months are referred to as secondary amenorrhea. This distinction is largely artificial, as the basic factors of primary and secondary amenorrhea may be the same. However, when providing clues about the cause and prognosis, this classification is valuable. For example, most congenital abnormalities, including developmental abnormalities in the ovary or Mullerian tissue, resulting in amenorrhea are classified as primary amenorrhea, while secondary amenorrhea is mostly caused by acquired diseases and is more easily treated.
Normal age of amenorrhea
Under normal circumstances, the age of female amenorrhea is usually between 45 and 55 years old. Amenorrhea is normal in this age group. In real life, some factors can lead to early menopause. This is something that women must know when they are going through menopause. For example, the occurrence of organ aging, such as smoking, leads to early menopause without the action of hormones, leading to early aging.
Symptoms before amenorrhea
1. Facial fever: It spreads from the bottom up to the entire face, often with significant vasodilation, redness, and sweating throughout the body. At the same time, dizziness and dizziness may occur, with varying degrees of redness. Some may be limited to redness on the face and neck, but it may also be frequent and severe.
2. Dysfunction of autonomic nervous system, numbness of limbs: especially at night, abnormal sensation and spasms in the extremities, heavy lower limbs, unclear placement of the legs, lower abdominal pain, palpitations, precordial pain, headache, dizziness, insomnia, and syncope. Irritable, emotionally unstable, prone to tantrums, sometimes suspicious and depressed
3. Excessive menstrual flow. Low menstrual flow is a common symptom before amenorrhea, due to lack of ovulation. Lack of ovulation usually occurs in the first year of menstruation, within a few years of menstruation cessation, as well as when women are under excessive pressure, in a bad mood, or in a changing living environment. This situation cannot be immediately cooked, pressure is not relaxed, and a good mood cannot be maintained. In severe cases, it can lead to illness and amenorrhea in women.