HAARAUSFALL BEI FRAUEN | 04. July 2023
How long do menopause last?

- The menopause occurs between the 45th ND 55 years and last for about ten years.
- Three phases shape menopause and end with the final setting of estrogen production.
- Due to the lack of estrogen, the body tends to excess of androgen, which often has reinforced hair loss.
The menopause loses a lot of their terror when we know when they will come to us and, above all, how long they will last. The linchpin of the menopause in terms of time is menopause, the last spontaneous monthly bleeding.
Statistically speaking, menopause takes place around the age of 52. A rule of thumb says that the duration of menopause is six years before menopause and six years after the menopause. Most women experience their menopause or the climacteric in the period between the 45th and 55th year of life. In general, the female organism takes between ten and fifteen years for menopause. Start of menopause and individual duration cannot be predicted exactly. However, daughters can roughly orient themselves on their mothers.
Duration of menopause not the decisive factor
The legitimate question of the duration of menopause, which is worn by a very individual curiosity ("How long do I have to suffer?") Sagging a little into perspective with a view to the statistics. The menopause lasts for different lengths in every woman, but whether the menopause is used a year earlier or stop a year later is not of the highest importance. Viel wichtiger ist, wie die betroffenen Frauen durch diese Zeit der Umstellung kommen. If you know the three phases of menopause and the symptoms associated with them, you can prevent many symptoms after talking to gynecologists or gynecologists.
Knowing factor
The removal of the vegetative symptoms, such as sleep disorders, mood fluctuations, nervousness, not least hot flalls and sweating, which is perceived as disturbing, can be done with vegetable or homeopathic means or with hormone therapy. However, the effect of hormones in diffuse hair loss, which begins at the beginning of menopause, has not been proven.
Depending on the individual dose, hormone preparations have a stabilizing and balancing effect on the organism. On the other hand, it is also no secret that the vegetative complaints caused by the estrogen deficit usually disappear after a few years even without hormone replacement therapy. Every woman needs to know what is good for her and how she best comes through the menopause.
The phases of menopause
It is helpful that menopause and menopause are not identical. Menopause is the time from which the ovaries no longer produce female sex hormones. The menopause in turn describes the period by the female organism has to come to terms with the ever increasing estrog deficit.
Phase 1: Premenopause
The premenopause (literally: before menopause) is the first phase of menopause. It can use the age of 45 and lasts an average of five to seven years. During this time, the production of female sex hormones gradually decreases. Since the premenopause begins gradually, its start cannot be set exactly.
In premenopause, progesterone first disappears, also called yellow body hormone. Progesterone stimulates the growth of the endometrium and prepares it for the embedding of a fertilized egg cell. If the egg cell is fertilized, progesterone prevents further follicular maturation.
The lack of progesterone leads to the first symptom of menopause, an irregular menstrual cycle. Other symptoms include sleep disorders, mood swings, concentration disorders, weight problems, water jams or painfully swollen breasts. If these symptoms are perceived by the women concerned, they can be alleviated by the administration of a natural progesterone.
Phase 2: Perimenopause
The second phase of menopause follows perimenopause (literally: around menopause). It describes the time one to two years before and after menopause, i.e. a period of two to four years. The estrogen production in the ovaries then sinks practically for zero. Estrogens promote the maturation of an egg cell. The uterine mucosa is well supplied with estrogens, the cervix opens, and the cervical secretion is permeable to sperm.
A lack of estrogens leads to the classic symptoms of menopause such as hot flashes combined with sweating, joint pain, dry mucous membranes, muscle pain, high cholesterol level and often to high blood pressure. The pituitary gland wants to end this not small number of physiological disorders as a control body. It therefore pours more follicle -stimulating hormone (FSH) and tries in vain to stimulate the ovaries, specifically the egg cells, and thus form estrogens.
At an average of 50 years, there are no follicles in the ovaries that could grow into ovulation follicle. Since the egg follicles in particular form estrogens, estrogen production is set.
If a year after the menopause there is no renewed menstruation, perimenopause is over and the postmenopause begins.
Phase 3: Postmenopause
Finally, in postmenopause (literally: after menopause) the subcutaneous fat fabric produces even smaller amounts of estrogen, but the level before menopause is no longer reached. The body reacts with the breakdown of estrogen receptors. Nevertheless, the menopausal symptoms only begin. As a result of estrogen deficiency, osteoporosis can be caused by years of reducing bone density. The bones become more porous and more susceptible to breaks.
As a lack of lack of estrogen, there is also a relative androgen surplus, which increases the hereditary hair loss and favors thinner hair. Auf ein Übermaß des männlichen Sexualhormons (DHT) reagieren viele Haarfollikel sehr empfindlich. Miniating the hair follicles and hair until the hair follicles adjust their production and ultimately no more hair grow back.
The patented Thiocyanate-Tropy formula in Thiocyn hair serum can stop the hair loss* if the cell metabolism on the hair roots is stimulated despite various disruptive factors.
Read by 23,000 people
Do it like 23,000 others and find out how you can improve your hair health - with great offers and discounts as well as helpful advice