horomonal changes No however she mayhave some of the symptoms due to changed hormone levels. Answer A radical hysterectomy will cause menopause to occur in a pre-menopausal patient. By definition, menopause is the cessation of menstruation. That it is caused by the natural decrease in hormones or by the surgical removal of the ovaries is irrelevant.
If you have a bilateral oopherectomy (removal of both ovaries) at the same time as a hysterectomy (removal of the uterus) then you will go into immediate surgcal menopause. If one or both ovaries remain then they will still produce the estroen etc and you will go into menopause at the usual time (av 51.7 years)
I'm 49 years old 16 years ago at the birth of my last child born I had to go have an emergency hysterectomy I was 33 at the time. I'm very healthy & active but been unable to sleep through the night for the last 3 years. I have started in the last month to get hot flashes. After my hysterectomy I never had another period no spotting nothing only right after the surgery for about a week. I would like to know if i'm going through menopause or if that is imposable after a hysterectomy. Any help you can give me I thank you.
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
Yes as if you have just had the uterus removed you still have your ovaries. The menopause is caused by the ovaries not producing as much estrogen as you age.
yes
Between men and women males are more likely to have it before women go through menopause. After women have gone through menopause they are equally likely to get it.
On average, women in the US go through menopause at age 51. After menopause, women stop ovulating.
Normal menopause occurs for half of all women before age 51 and the rest will go through it after. Most women will finish menopause between the ages of 42 and 58.
Either when their pregnant or when they get older and go through menopause
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.
Menopause is a period of time when a woman's body changes and her periods stop. Women who go through menopause can no longer conceive.
No, it is the same for all women regardless of their sexual orientation.
Menopause is only a term for the change that happens to women when they cease to be able to have babies. So if a woman has had a child or not she will usually go through the menopause at about late forties or fifties.
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."
Women typically go through menopause in their 50's and 60's.
no.