Generally no because menopause is described at the end of menstruation.
Typically, a woman of childbearing age should menstruate every 28 days or so unless she is pregnant or moving into menopause.
it's call "menopause" that means no more eggs EVAR
No, not every female gets her period. If talking exclusively of those who are biologically female there are those who don't have the anatomy to menstruate or their bodies don't produce the hormones needed to have a menstrual cycle. Pre-pubescent girls don't menstruate and women past menopause don't menstruate, also women who are pregnant won't menstruate during pregnancy (sometimes for longer if they breastfeed), and women who have a hysterectomy to remove the uterus.
Yes, it is normal for you to menstruate at the age of 54 years old.Most women will go into menopause between 45-55, but during this time they can still menstruate - even if irregularly. Everyone is different, not everyone at 54 has gone through menopause.
Until around fifty it is not true that if a women get her period early in life she will go through menopause earlier
During yes, after no.
yes
The medical term used to describe "absence of periods" is amenorrhea. Women normally do not menstruate before puberty, during pregnancy, and after menopause. If a woman does not get her period when she normally should, it may be the symptom of a treatable medical condition.
How My Mother Gave Birth to Me During Menopause was created in 2003.
Why am I losing weight during post menopause
There is no change in the colour of urine during menopause.
Women can have decreasing hormones during 7 years before entering menopause. This time is called pre-menopause.