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How long does menopause last? Five tips for navigating uncertain times

How long does menopause last? Five tips for navigating uncertain times
Naomi Watts debuts a menopause greeting card collection with Em & Friends on August 30, 2022 in New York City. (Photo by Noam Galai/Getty Images for STRIPES)

Uncertainty about how long symptoms will last can be tough for women going through hormonal changes that come with menopause. Unfortunately, there isn’t a clear-cut time frame.

Around half of the world’s population are women or people who menstruate – yet the way their body works can be a mystery, even to them.

Most women will experience periods roughly every month, many will go through childbirth and those who live into midlife will experience menopause. While menopause is a significant time of change, it isn’t talked about much, other than as a punchline. This may contribute to keeping it a taboo topic.

So, what happens during menopause? How do you know when it is happening to you? And – the thing most women want to know – how long will it last?

What is menopause?

Menopause is defined as the permanent cessation of menstruation, which is medically determined to be one year after the final menstrual period. After this time women are considered to be postmenopausal.

The average age of “natural menopause” (that is not caused by a medical condition, treatment or surgery) is considered to be around 51 years. However, natural menopause does not occur suddenly. Changes can begin a number of years before periods stop and most often occur in a woman’s 40s but they can be earlier. Changes can continue for 10 years or more after periods have stopped.

Using hormones such as the oral contraceptive pill or hormone intrauterine devices may make it more difficult to determine when changes start. Menopause that occurs before 45 is called “early menopause”, while menopause before 40 is called “premature menopause”.

What about perimenopause?

Various terms are used to describe this period of change, including “menopause” or “the menopause”, “menopausal transition”, “perimenopause” or “climacteric”.

These terms tend to refer to the period before and after the final menstrual period, when changes are considered to be related to menopause. The difficulty with the definition of menopause is it can only be decided retrospectively. Yet women can experience changes many years before their periods stop (a lead-up usually called “perimenopause”). Also, any changes noticed may not be associated with menopause (because people might not be aware of what to expect) or changes may be associated with a combination of factors such as stress, being busy or other health issues.

So, what is going on?

Through a feminist lens, menopause can be seen as a complex and diverse experience, influenced by biological, psychological, social and cultural aspects of women’s lives. However, it is usually viewed from the biomedical perspective. This sees it as a biological event, marked by the decline in ovarian hormone levels leading to a reduction in reproductive function.

The female reproductive system operates because of a finely tuned balance of hormones managed by the hypothalamic-pituitary-ovarian axis. International experts have developed a staging system for female reproductive ageing, with seven stages from “early reproductive” years to “late postmenopause”. However, female reproductive hormones do not just affect the reproductive system but other aspects of the body’s function. These include the neurological system, which is linked to hot flushes and night sweats and disrupted sleep. Hormones may also affect the heart and body’s blood circulation, bone health and potentially the immune system.

Menopausal hormone changes may cause hot flushes, night/cold sweats, mood swings, sleep disruption and tiredness and vaginal dryness. Medical confirmation of menopausal changes in women over 45 years is based on two biological indicators: vasomotor symptoms (those hot flushes and night sweats again) and an irregular menstrual cycle.

In early perimenopause, the changes to the menstrual cycle may be subtle. Women may not recognise early indicators unless they keep a record and know what to watch for.

How long does it last?

The body demonstrates an amazing ability to change over a lifetime. In a similar way to adolescence where long-lasting changes occur, the outcome of menopause is also change.

Research suggests it is difficult to give an exact time frame for how long menopausal changes occur – the average is between four and eight years. The Penn Ovarian Ageing Study found 79% of the 259 participants experienced hot flushes starting before the age of 50, most commonly between 45 and 49 years of age.

A later report on the same study found one-third of women studied experienced moderate to severe hot flushes more than ten years after their periods had stopped. A 2017 study found a small number of women continued to experience hot flushes and other symptoms into their 70s.

So overall, the research cannot offer a specific window for perimenopause, and menopause does not appear to mark the end of changes for everyone.

5 tips for uncertain times

Shifts and changes can be recognised early by developing knowledge, paying attention to changes in our bodies and talking about menopause and perimenopause more openly.

Here are five tips for moving from uncertainty to certainty:

  1. talk to people and find out as much information as you can. The experiences of mothers and sisters may help, for some women, there are familial similarities
  2. notice any changes to your body and make a note of them, this will help you recognise changes earlier. There are menopause tracking apps available
  3. keep a note of your menstrual cycle: start date, duration, flow and note any changes. Again, an app might help
  4. if you are worried, seek advice from a GP or nurse that specialises in women’s health. They may suggest ways to help with symptoms or refer you to a specialist
  5. remember changes are the indicator to pay attention to, not time or your age.

Menopause is a natural process and although we have focused here on the time frame and “symptoms”, it can also be a time of freedom (particularly from periods!), reflection and a time to focus on yourself. DM/ML 

This story was first published in The Conversation.

Yvonne Middlewick is a Nurse and Lecturer at Edith Cowan University.

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Comments - Please in order to comment.

  • Nina Bodisch says:

    As a post-menopausal woman, I really take exception to how Western medicine seems to pathologize menopause. It is not a medical condition!! Why so much fear instilled in women about the dangers of dementia, cardiovascular problems, osteoporosis, depression and urinary-genital atrophy and dysfunction. Big Pharma seems to want to push Hormone Replacement Therapy by driving fear into us about all the physical and mental calamaties that will befall women of a certain age if they do not artificially supplement with hormones. In certain communities the world over, notably in Japan, where a healthy traditional diet rich in phytoestrogen is consumed (soy products for eg), they have no word for “hot flush”! After some years on HRT with the resultant development of a large fibroid which I was then advised to remove via a complete hysterectomy, I decided to take my menopausal journey into my own hands and step away from the “menopause is a medical condition” mindset. Happy to report that with natural remedies (daily supplements of chasteberry drops, switching to soya milk, vegetarian lifestyle, continued exercise programme including bone-strengthening weight bearing exercise like jogging, hiking and brisk walking, and embracing more of a mindfulness practice in my daily life), I am enjoying a really good quality of life. I hope never to have to undergo radical surgery of any sort. I will never take HRT again. Please people with a uterus – do not buy into the “menopause is a medical condition” mindset!!

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