Menopause marks the permanent end of menstrual cycles — defined clinically as twelve consecutive months without a period. The average age of natural menopause in the United States is 51, but the hormonal transition leading up to it — perimenopause — begins years earlier, often in the mid-40s, with symptoms that can be significant and disruptive well before the final menstrual period. The hormonal changes of menopause do not end at the last period; they continue for years afterward and have long-term implications for bone density, cardiovascular health, cognitive function, and quality of life.
Menopause care has evolved significantly over the past two decades. The medical community’s understanding of hormone therapy — its risks, its benefits, and the populations for whom it is most appropriate — has been substantially refined since the early 2000s. Current evidence supports hormone therapy as safe and effective for the right candidates, and there is growing recognition that the historical overcorrection away from hormonal treatment left many women undertreated for symptoms that had effective management options.
At Lapeer Women’s Health, menopause care means an individualized evaluation of your symptoms, your health history, your risk profile, and your goals — followed by a clear, evidence-based discussion of the options available to you. The pages in this cluster cover each aspect of the menopause transition in depth, from perimenopause through postmenopause, from hot flashes and sleep to bone health and sexual function.
Menopause symptoms extend well beyond hot flashes. The following reflects the full range of symptoms associated with the hormonal changes of perimenopause and menopause — many of which are not immediately recognized as hormone-related by the women experiencing them.
- Hot flashes — sudden waves of heat affecting the face, neck, and chest, sometimes with visible flushing and sweating
- Night sweats — hot flashes during sleep that disrupt rest and may require clothing or bedding changes
- Irregular periods during perimenopause — cycles that become longer, shorter, heavier, lighter, or unpredictably variable
- Vaginal dryness, reduced lubrication, and pain with intercourse from declining estrogen effects on vaginal tissue
- Sleep disturbances — difficulty falling asleep, frequent waking, and non-restorative sleep
- Mood changes — increased irritability, anxiety, low mood, or emotional reactivity that is new or out of character
- Cognitive changes — brain fog, difficulty concentrating, and short-term memory lapses
- Urinary symptoms — increased urgency, frequency, or recurrent urinary tract infections from genitourinary atrophy
- Decreased libido and changes in sexual interest or response
- Joint aches and muscle pain that develop or worsen during the menopausal transition
- Changes in hair texture or density and skin changes including dryness or reduced elasticity
- Weight gain or changes in body composition — particularly increased abdominal adiposity
- Palpitations — awareness of the heartbeat — that coincide with hot flash episodes
Not every woman experiences all of these symptoms, and their severity varies widely. What is consistent is that when symptoms are present and affecting quality of life, they have management options — and those options deserve to be discussed.
Most menopause symptoms are appropriately addressed through a scheduled evaluation. Contact our office the same day if you experience:
- Any vaginal bleeding after 12 consecutive months without a period — postmenopausal bleeding always warrants prompt evaluation
- Heavy or unusual bleeding during perimenopause that is significantly outside your recent pattern
- New pelvic pain alongside any vaginal bleeding in the postmenopausal period
Lapeer: (810) 969-4670 · Rochester Hills: (248) 923-3522
The transition to menopause is not a single event — it is a hormonal progression that unfolds over years. Understanding each stage helps contextualize your symptoms and guides the most appropriate management approach.
Perimenopause — The Transition Years
Perimenopause is the hormonal transition period leading up to the final menstrual period, typically beginning in the mid-40s but occasionally earlier. It is characterized by fluctuating and declining estrogen levels that produce irregular menstrual cycles, vasomotor symptoms (hot flashes and night sweats), sleep disruption, mood changes, and the early stages of genitourinary changes. Perimenopause can last four to eight years before the final period, and symptoms are often at their most variable and disruptive during this phase. Many women do not recognize perimenopausal symptoms as hormone-related because they are still having periods — leading to undertreatment of a transition that has effective management options. Learn more about perimenopause symptoms →
Menopause — The Final Period
Menopause is defined as twelve consecutive months without a menstrual period, at which point the preceding month marks the final menstrual period. It is a retrospective diagnosis — you can only know you have reached menopause after twelve months have passed. The average age is 51, with a normal range of approximately 45 to 55. Menopause before age 40 is considered premature ovarian insufficiency and has specific management considerations, including earlier attention to bone and cardiovascular health given the longer duration of estrogen deficiency.
Postmenopause — The Years After
Postmenopause encompasses the years following the final menstrual period. The acute vasomotor symptoms of perimenopause and early menopause often improve with time, though for some women they persist for a decade or more. The longer-term consequences of estrogen deficiency — genitourinary syndrome of menopause, bone density loss, and cardiovascular changes — become increasingly important considerations in the postmenopausal years. Postmenopausal care at Lapeer Women’s Health addresses both symptom management and the long-term health implications of the hormonal transition.
Surgical Menopause
Surgical menopause occurs when both ovaries are removed, producing an immediate and complete loss of ovarian estrogen production. Unlike natural menopause, which unfolds gradually over years, surgical menopause is abrupt — and the resulting vasomotor and genitourinary symptoms are often more severe than those of natural menopause. Women who undergo oophorectomy before the natural age of menopause have a longer duration of estrogen deficiency and specific considerations regarding bone health, cardiovascular health, and hormone therapy that are addressed at the time of surgical counseling and in postoperative care.
Menopause care at Lapeer Women’s Health is led by Dr. Ramona D. Andrei, MD, PhD, FACOG — with an individualized approach that takes your symptoms seriously, evaluates your health history carefully, and presents treatment options based on current evidence rather than outdated caution.
Step 1 — Symptom and Health History
Dr. Andrei reviews your full symptom picture — which symptoms are present, their severity, their impact on daily functioning, and how long they have been present. Your personal and family medical history — including cardiovascular history, breast health history, and bone density considerations — is reviewed to inform the risk-benefit discussion around hormone therapy and other treatment options.
Step 2 — Examination and Targeted Testing
A physical examination includes assessment of genitourinary tissue health and other relevant findings. Hormone testing — FSH, estradiol, and other markers when indicated — provides objective information to complement the clinical picture. Bone density screening is discussed and ordered when appropriate. Additional testing is ordered based on your individual health picture and the management options being considered.
Step 3 — An Individualized Treatment Plan
Treatment recommendations are specific to your symptom burden, your health history, your risk profile, and your preferences. The full range of options — from lifestyle measures through hormonal and non-hormonal pharmacologic treatment — is discussed before any recommendation is made. No recommendation is applied generically.
Management of menopause symptoms spans a range from lifestyle measures through prescription hormonal therapy. The right approach for any individual depends on her specific symptoms, health history, and treatment goals.
Lifestyle measures form the foundation of menopause management for all patients and complement medical treatment for those who pursue it. Sleep hygiene, stress management, exercise, and dietary attention to bone health are evidence-based contributors to symptom management and long-term health outcomes. Non-hormonal pharmacologic options including certain antidepressants, gabapentin, and clonidine provide vasomotor symptom relief for women who are not candidates for or do not prefer hormonal therapy.
Hormone therapy — systemic estrogen with or without progestogen for women with a uterus — remains the most effective treatment for hot flashes, night sweats, sleep disruption, mood changes, and genitourinary symptoms of menopause. Current evidence supports hormone therapy as safe for most healthy women under 60 who are within 10 years of menopause onset, with the benefit-risk balance most favorable in this window. The type of hormone therapy, its route of delivery, and the specific formulation are individualized based on the patient’s health history and symptom profile.
Menopause care at Lapeer Women’s Health extends beyond symptom management to the long-term health consequences of estrogen deficiency. Bone density screening and monitoring, discussion of osteoporosis prevention and treatment when indicated, cardiovascular risk assessment, and ongoing well-woman care are integrated into menopause management for postmenopausal patients. Dr. Andrei coordinates with primary care and other specialists as needed for the full scope of postmenopausal health management.
One of the most persistent and consequential misunderstandings in women’s health is that menopause symptoms are an inevitable feature of aging that must simply be accepted. Hot flashes that disrupt sleep every night, vaginal dryness that makes intimacy painful, mood changes that affect relationships and work — these are not trivial inconveniences. They are physiological consequences of a hormonal transition that has safe, effective management options for the right candidates.
The conversation about those options starts with an individualized evaluation that takes your symptom burden seriously, reviews your health history carefully, and presents the evidence clearly and honestly. That conversation is one that many women have never had — because they were never offered it. Dr. Ramona D. Andrei and the team at Lapeer Women’s Health are here to have it.
Both our Lapeer and Rochester Hills offices are available for menopause consultations. No referral required.
Menopause and Hormone Management
Our team at Lapeer Women’s Health provides individualized, evidence-based menopause care at both our Lapeer and Rochester Hills offices. No referral required.
Schedule a Gynecologic VisitThe information on this page is intended for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Individual symptoms, diagnoses, and treatment options vary significantly. Reading this content does not establish a physician-patient relationship with Dr. Ramona D. Andrei or Lapeer Women’s Health. If you are experiencing a medical emergency, call 911 or go to the nearest emergency room immediately. Please consult a qualified healthcare provider for advice specific to your situation. Content reviewed by Dr. Ramona D. Andrei, MD PhD FACOG.
Gynecologic care for women of every age
Lapeer Women’s Health — Rochester Hills
2710 S Rochester Rd, Suite 2
Rochester Hills, MI 48307
Serving patients in Lapeer, Rochester Hills, and surrounding communities throughout Southeast Michigan.
