Updated
Updated · The Guardian · Jun 7
Perimenopause Often Starts Around 47, With Hot Flashes Hitting 80% Later
Updated
Updated · The Guardian · Jun 7

Perimenopause Often Starts Around 47, With Hot Flashes Hitting 80% Later

3 articles · Updated · The Guardian · Jun 7

Summary

  • Age 47 is the average starting point for perimenopause, and the clearest early sign is a menstrual cycle that becomes irregular—often arriving at least a week early or late or skipping altogether.
  • About 40% of women have hot flashes in early perimenopause, rising to roughly 80% later, as ovarian estrogen production becomes lower and more erratic and also disrupts sleep, mood, and genital and bladder health.
  • Over 45, typical symptoms are usually enough for clinicians to diagnose perimenopause without blood tests, because estrogen levels swing so widely that a single result can be misleading.
  • Blood tests are more useful when symptoms are atypical, start unusually early, or periods are masked by an IUD, hysterectomy, or chemotherapy; doctors may also need to rule out thyroid disease or diabetes.
  • 12 months after the last period marks menopause itself, and experts say bothersome symptoms should prompt treatment—hormonal and non-hormonal options exist but remain underprescribed.

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