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35 Menopause Symptoms

Women speak out about how menopause really feels: here are the 35 symptoms women can experience during "the change." (One or more symptoms may be your experience.)

An electronic mailing list created by Judy Bayliss and Lucy L. Brown, Ph.D. at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine has been used to collect information about the true experience of menopause. From information given by the mailing list’s perimenopausal and menopausal subscribers, these women have compiled a list of 35 menopause symptoms – many of which have not yet been recognized by the medical mainstream.

If you’ve had menopausal symptoms that you’ve never been told to expect, and that your doctor can’t explain, you’ll be relieved to find that other women have had similar experiences. All of the symptoms were reported to be cyclical or were relieved by therapies known to remedy hormone imbalances – the root cause of all menopause and perimenopause symptoms. (Many of these symptoms can be classified as perimenopausal, occurring in the months or years prior to the complete cessation of menstruation.)

Here are the 35 menopause symptoms compiled by Judy Bayliss and Dr. Brown:

  1. Hot flashes, flushes, night sweats and/or cold flashes, clammy feeling
  2. Bouts of rapid heartbeat
  3. Irritability
  4. Mood swings, sudden tears
  5. Trouble sleeping through the night (with or without night sweats)
  6. Irregular periods; shorter, lighter periods; heavier periods, flooding; phantom periods, shorter cycles, longer cycles
  7. Partial or complete loss of libido
  8. Dry vagina, resulting in painful intercourse; a general drying-out that can include eyes, mouth, joints, skin
  9. Crashing fatigue
  10. Anxiety, feeling ill at ease
  11. Feelings of dread, apprehension, doom – thoughts of one’s own death, picturing one’s own death
  12. Difficulty concentrating, disorientation, mental confusion
  13. Disturbing memory lapses
  14. Incontinence, especially upon sneezing, laughing; urge incontinence, where leakage occurs when one needs to urinate
  15. Itchy, crawly skin – feeling of ants crawling under the skin
  16. Aching, sore joints, possible carpal tunnel syndrome
  17. Increased muscle tension
  18. Breast tenderness
  19. Headaches increase or decrease
  20. Gastrointestinal distress, indigestion, flatulence, gas pain, nausea
  21. Sudden bouts of bloat
  22. Depression that can become overwhelming; feeling of loss of self that has been dramatically relieved with hormone therapy
  23. Exacerbation of existing conditions
  24. Increase in allergies
  25. Weight gain, especially around waist and thighs, resulting in ‘the disappearing waistline’
  26. Hair loss or thinning on head, in pubic area, or on whole body; increase in facial hair
  27. Dizziness, lightheadedness, episodes of loss of balance
  28. Changes in body odor
  29. Electric shock sensation under the skin and in the head – "the feeling of a rubber band snapping in the layer of tissue between skin and muscle…the precursor to a hot flash."
  30. Tingling in extremities, which can also be a symptom of B-12 deficiency, diabetes, or depletion of potassium or calcium
  31. Gum problems, increased gum bleeding
  32. Burning tongue, burning roof of mouth, bad taste in mouth, dry mouth, change in breath odor
  33. Osteoporosis (after several years)
  34. Changes in fingernails: softer, crack or break more easily
  35. An additional symptom some report: tinnitus, a ringing in the ears or sounds of whooshing, bells, or buzzing.

Unfortunately, the 35 menopause symptoms listed above are often attributed to estrogen lack, and many doctors think that HRT is the best treatment. While HRT usually does work to relieve many of these menopausal symptoms, there are better options – natural ones that present far less risk and equal benefit. (Recent research on conventional HRT drugs has shown that it increases breast cancer risk and does little to reduce the risk of osteoporosis and heart disease.) Some of the 35 menopause symptoms are the result of estrogen lack, but the majority are actually due to lack of progesterone and the resulting condition of estrogen dominance. Read more about low progesterone, estrogen dominance, and the use of natural hormones for menopause.

Additional Information:

Find out more information about the night sweats, hot flashes and other perimenopausal symptoms in the book:

What Your Doctor May Not Tell You About PREmenopause

Find out more information about Natural Progesterone:

Awakening Woman Restore Balance Natural Progesterone Cream and how it can help you.


Find out more information about Natural Phyto-Estrogen:

EstroRenew, the unique formulation of 3 natural phyto-estrogens can be taken in concert with Awakening Woman Natural Progesterone Cream as an excellent souorce of natural estrogen.

 



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