Menopause: An Overview
What Is Menopause?
More than one third of the women in the United States, about 36 million, have been
through menopause. With a life expectancy of about 81 years, a 50-year-old woman can
expect to live more than one third of her life after menopause. Scientific research is
just beginning to address some of the unanswered questions about these years and about the
poorly understood biology of menopause.
Menopause is the point in a woman's life when menstruation stops permanently,
signifying the end of her ability to have children. Known as the "change of
life," menopause is the last stage of a gradual biological process in which the
ovaries reduce their production of female sex hormones -- a process which begins about 3 to
5 years before the final menstrual period. This transitional phase is called the
climacteric, or perimenopause. Menopause is considered complete when a woman has been
without periods for 1 year. On average, this occurs at about age 50. But like the
beginning of menstruation in adolescence, timing varies from person to person. Cigarette
smokers tend to reach menopause earlier than nonsmokers.
How Does It Happen?
The ovaries contain structures called follicles that hold the egg cells. You are born
with about 2 million egg cells and by puberty there are about 300,000 left. Only about 400
to 500 ever mature fully to be released during the menstrual cycle.
The rest degenerate over the years. During the reproductive years, the pituitary gland
in the brain generates hormones that cause a new egg to be released from its follicle each
month. The follicle also increases production of the sex hormones estrogen and
progesterone, which thicken the lining of the uterus. This enriched lining is prepared to
receive and nourish a fertilized egg following conception. If fertilization does not
occur, estrogen and progesterone levels drop, the lining of the uterus breaks down, and
menstruation occurs.
For unknown reasons, the ovaries begin to decline in hormone production during the
mid-thirties. In the late forties, the process accelerates and hormones fluctuate more,
causing irregular menstrual cycles and unpredictable episodes of heavy bleeding. By the
early to mid-fifties, periods finally end altogether. However, estrogen production does
not completely stop. The ovaries decrease their output significantly, but still may
produce a small amount. Also, another form of estrogen is produced in fat tissue with help
from the adrenal glands (near the kidney). Although this form of estrogen is weaker than
that produced by the ovaries, it increases with age and with the amount of fat tissue.
Progesterone, the other female hormone, works during the second half of the menstrual
cycle to create a lining in the uterus as a viable home for an egg, and to shed the lining
if the egg is not fertilized. If you skip a period, your body may not be making enough
progesterone to break down the uterine lining. However, your estrogen levels may remain
high even though you are not menstruating.
At menopause, hormone levels don't always decline uniformly. They alternately rise and
fall again. Changing ovarian hormone levels affect the other glands in the body, which
together make up the endocrine system. The endocrine system controls growth, metabolism,
and reproduction. This system must constantly readjust itself to work effectively. Ovarian
hormones also affect all other tissues, including the breasts, vagina, bones, blood
vessels, gastrointestinal tract, urinary tract, and skin.
Surgical Menopause
Premenopausal women who have both their ovaries removed surgically experience an abrupt
menopause. They may be hit harder by menopausal symptoms than are those who experience it
naturally. Their hot flashes may be more severe, more frequent, and last longer. They may
have a greater risk of heart disease and osteoporosis, and may be more likely to become
depressed. The reasons for this are unknown. When only one ovary is removed, menopause
usually occurs naturally. When the uterus is removed (hysterectomy) and the ovaries
remain, menstrual periods stop but other menopausal symptoms (if any) usually occur at the
same age that they would naturally. However, some women who have a hysterectomy may
experience menopausal symptoms at a younger age.
Information provided by the
National Institutes of Health
Article Created: 2000-03-29 Article Updated: 2000-03-29
Each year, Medical College of Wisconsin physicians care for more than 180,000 patients, representing nearly 500,000 patient visits. Medical College physicians practice at Children's Hospital of Wisconsin, Froedtert Memorial Lutheran Hospital, the Milwaukee VA Medical Center, and many other hospitals and clinics in Milwaukee and southeastern Wisconsin.
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