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I am a 34 year old woman who has had 2 c-sections and my tubes tyed and burnt. i have periods every 2 to 3 weeks. i have been experiencing mood swings worse than normal. i am a working wife and mother. my life is stressful. i was recently diagnosed with anxiety attacks. my latest attack included difficulty breathing, uncontrolable body shakes, an out of it feeling, and a hot flash that didn't go away. that was when i was diagnosed with anxiety attacks. is it possible that menopause is causing these attacks or am i just losing my mind? what are some symptoms of menopause. docs keeping telling me i'm too young for menopause but i don't believe them. anyone else with anything like this please give me input or any docs please answer my question. only serious answers please. thanks

2007-03-06 09:33:08 · 4 answers · asked by a very happily married woman 3 in Health Women's Health

i was diagnosed last week but they put me on atenolol because i have high blood pressure also. this is supposed to lower my blood pressure, heart rate and adrenalin but i was higher than a kite all day the next day from it so i didn't take anymore. i'm supposed to go back to the doctor thursday. hopefully they can give me something different to help me. my blood pressure isn't extremely high anyway just a little bit.

2007-03-06 12:28:31 · update #1

4 answers

Some of your symptoms seem as though you could be menopausal. However, you are very young for that to actually be the case. There are some basic blood tests that can be done to determine if you really are. Have you begun treatment for the anxiety disorder? Besides the irregular periods, the other symptoms sound much more related to that than an early onset of menopause. I am hoping that you've begun some meds for it. Once you are in a therapeutic range with the dose of medication, then you can evaluate which symptoms improve or go away completely. Certainly once you've begun a med for an anxiety disorder, you will be following up with the doctor who prescribed it. If you're still having symptoms that may be indicative of perimenopause or menopause, discuss that with them so they can order the appropriate blood work. Take care.

2007-03-06 10:11:44 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Menopause is the medical term for the end of a woman's menstrual periods. It is a natural part of aging, and occurs when the ovaries stop making hormones called estrogens. This causes estrogen levels to drop, and leads to the end of monthly menstual periods. This usually happens between the ages of 45 and 60, but it can happen earlier. Menopause can also occur when the ovaries are surgically removed or stop functioning for any other reason.
Given that you are still having your periods, it is impossible that you are having your menopause
now. Although it is only a possiblilty, you could be experiencing Perimenopause, or menopause transition, is the stage of a woman's reproductive life that begins several years before menopause, when the ovaries gradually begin to produce less estrogen. It usually starts in a woman's 40s, but can start in the 30s as well.

Perimenopause lasts up until menopause, the point when the ovaries stop releasing eggs. In the last one to two years of perimenopause, this decline in estrogen accelerates. At this stage, many women experience menopausal symptoms.
The average length of perimenopause is four years, but for some women this stage may last only a few months or continue for 10 years. Perimenopause ends the first year after menopause (when a woman has gone 12 months without having her period).
You will know you are transitioning into menopause when you begin experiencing some or all of the following symptoms:

Hot flashes
Breast tenderness
Worsening of premenstrual syndrome
Decreased libido (sex drive)
Fatigue
Irregular periods
Vaginal dryness; discomfort during sex
Urine leakage when coughing or sneezing
Urinary urgency (a pressing need to urinate more frequently)
Mood swings
Difficulty sleeping

-Irregular periods are common and normal during perimenopause. But, other conditions can cause abnormalities in menstrual bleeding. If any of the following situations apply to you, see a doctor to rule out other causes:

Your periods are very heavy, or accompanied by blood clots.
Your periods last several days longer than usual.
You spot between periods.
You experience spotting after sex.
Your periods occur closer together.
Potential causes of abnormal bleeding include hormonal imbalances, birth control pills, pregnancy, fibroids, blood clotting problems or, rarely, cancer.

Often your doctor can make the diagnosis based on your symptoms. Blood tests to check hormone levels may also be beneficial but may be difficult to evaluate due to erratic fluctuations of hormones during this period. It may be more helpful to have several tests done at different times for comparison.

Many women experience relief from hot flashes after taking low-dose birth control pills for a short period of time.
You may also feel better if you do things that enhance your general well-being, such as:

Exercise.
Stop smoking if you smoke.
Get more sleep and try going to sleep and waking up at the same time each day.
Decrease the amount of alcohol you drink.
Get to a healthy weight and stay there.
Take a multivitamin supplement and ingest enough calcium.
Drink at least eight glasses of water each day.

Talk to your doctor if you are experiencing problems with your sex drive. He or she may be able to recommend a counselor or therapist to help you and your partner work through this issue.

Additional treatments available to help with the various symptoms of perimenopause may include antidepressant medications for mood swings.

This is simply a suggestion. It could be that you are experiencing too much stress.It is the stress that triggers your panic attacks and you should learn to try to recognize the triggers, so that you can control the attacks more easily. Do go to your doctor's once more and remember-you have a right to more than one doctor's opinion. If you think you might be experiencing perimenopause, tell your doctor.

2007-03-06 09:56:38 · answer #2 · answered by tuumac 2 · 1 0

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2016-04-27 18:01:51 · answer #3 · answered by ronnie 3 · 0 0

it could definitely be menopause.

you don't need to suffer, there is a wealth of things you can do without a doctor, like supplements and natural progesterone cream.

there is a wealth of info available. start with the book, "What your doctor may not tell you about menopause" there is also a pre-menopause version you should look for. check you local library.

welcome to the club.

2007-03-06 09:40:12 · answer #4 · answered by chieromancer 6 · 0 0

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