Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

What women should know about perimenopa­use

- Delaney Nothaft

Understand­ing menopause can be confusing because of the many terms that encapsulat­e the process.

Medically, menopause is the 12 months after a woman’s last period, but it is often used to describe the entirety of the stages a woman goes through when her body transition­s to no longer having periods.

There are three stages – premenopau­se or perimenopa­use, menopause and postmenopa­use.

This can be confusing because premenopau­se and perimenopa­use mean very similar but slightly different things.

To explain the stage where the bulk of the changes and symptoms are occurring, perimenopa­use, we spoke with the following experts: Dr. Jen Gunter, a San Francisco Bay areabased board-certified OB-GYN and author of “The Menopause Manifesto;” Dr. Bryan Jick, M.D., FACOG, NCMP, a board-certified OB-GYN affiliated with Huntington Hospital in Cedars Sinai; and Dr. Elaine Waetjen, a board-certified OB-GYN and professor in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at UC Davis Health.

Are premenopau­se and perimenopa­use the same thing?

All of our experts gave similar descriptio­ns of premenopau­se and perimenopa­use. In short:

Premenopau­se and perimenopa­use are almost the same thing – they are referring to the period of time leading up to menopause, or the menopause transition. Perimenopa­use also includes the one year following your last menstrual period.

When does perimenopa­use start?

The typical age of onset for menopause is a broad range – typically from 45 to 55. But perimenopa­use generally starts a few years earlier.

What are the first signs of perimenopa­use?

A common theme that arose from our experts was that any symptoms that arise around the time of menopause should be evaluated by a physician because it shouldn’t be an automatic assumption that it’s menopause.

“First, it’s important for people to know that if you’re not having any symptoms and you’re doing great and you’re perfectly fine, you don’t need to have any treatment,” Gunter explains. “It’s also important to see your doctor and get an evaluation because menopause is also happening while you’re aging and you want to make sure it’s not something else, right? Or it could be two things at once. So you just always want to be mindful of that,” she emphasizes.

How does your body feel in perimenopa­use?

Waetjen explains, “Women may have symptoms that can be related to perimenopa­use, but may also be related to just getting older or to having other medical conditions that arise in this age group such as difficulty sleeping, brain fog, weight gain (especially around the middle), mood swings, sexual pain.”

The symptoms also could be complicate­d and secondary. Jick says, “It (menopause) starts to interfere with your sleep. You are waking up multiple times a night. And we call it a night sweat, but it’s the same thing – it’s a hot flash that occurs while you’re asleep. Then you start to see after a few months a lot of symptoms that arise due to sleep deprivatio­n – that’s what gets people to the doctor. It affects so many things – your mood, your memory, your concentrat­ion, your attention span, you forget things, (brain fog) you’re tired, and loss of sleep can cause weight gain – this is well documented. A lot of this is indirect. It’s not exactly menopause itself doing this – it’s loss of sleep that’s doing this.”

While there are different terms and myriad symptoms, this holds true for everyone: menopause is not a disease; it’s a natural process.

It does not diminish your worth as a person or partner, and you don’t have to suffer silently through distressin­g symptoms because there are treatment options.

 ?? YACOBCHUK/GETTY IMAGES ?? The typical age of onset for menopause is a broad range – typically from 45 to 55. But perimenopa­use starts a few years earlier.
YACOBCHUK/GETTY IMAGES The typical age of onset for menopause is a broad range – typically from 45 to 55. But perimenopa­use starts a few years earlier.

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