You can certainly go through seasons & cycles & have hot flashes at different times in your life but Menopause is a one way trip.
That is usually the time people go through menopause. Between 48-52.
If you still have your ovaries, you should go through menopause at the normal time for you. With a full hysterectomy, you will experience "surgical menopause."
no.
Female cats don't go through menopause.
no they dont go through the menopause
Yes the hysterectomy alone is removal of the uterus and it is the ovaries failing as you get older that causes menopause. Youl will go into immediate menopause if you have you ovaries removed and are premenopausal
On average, menopause occurs at 51 years of age. This is only an average, and many women go through menopause earlier or later than that. It can occur anywhere between 40 and 60 years of age. If it is earlier than 40, then it is considered early menopause. Some women go through menopause because of surgery or because it's chemically induced. Women who smoke tend to go through menopause a little earlier than others. Menopause is said to occur after 12 consecutive months with no period.
62 years old.
Like death & Taxes, it's coming and you cant get out of it, No Hall Pass for menopause. You can reduce the symptoms with Hormone Replacement Therapy, but that fertile cycle in your life will end & the periods will go away & you will go through Menopause.
Menopause is a natural process that marks the end of a woman's menstrual cycles, typically occurring in her late 40s or early 50s. During menopause, the ovaries stop releasing eggs and hormone levels change, leading to symptoms such as hot flashes, mood swings, and changes in menstrual patterns.
No, menopause is a primate-only event in which menstrual cycles become erratic and then cease. As dogs do not have menstrual cycles, they do not go through menopause. Dogs have estrus cycles, and under certain conditions can go through a period of anestrus when they stop having estrus cycles. Late in life, a female dog may permanently go into anestrus, but this is not all that common.
You should have gone through menopause at the time of your complete hysterectomy. Depending on your age and the reason for the hysterectomy you may have been given replacement hormones, at some point in time - your doctor would have slowly decreased the hormones - that would cause you to go into menopause.