What is the reason for amenorrhea? Once a woman experiences amenorrhea, the ovaries will decrease and the woman's body will gradually age, so delaying the onset of amenorrhea. However, some women may experience amenorrhea earlier, so what is the reason for amenorrhea? The small edge below will introduce it to you.
Summer is coming, you must be busy losing weight, you beauty lover? Excessive exercise and amenorrhea will quietly stare at you.
After sending her 7-year-old son to her grandmother's house for elementary school, Ms. Bai, 34, decided to restore her slender posture at the age of 20 and start running every morning before going to work. Soon, she fell in love with the joy of running and the comfort of taking a morning shower. A few months later, Ms. Bai's running time increased from 20 minutes to one hour, running faster and faster. Ms. Bai has become better now, but she has also noticed a decrease in menstrual flow, usually only with spot bleeding, which may even disappear completely within a few months. After two consecutive months without menstruation, she decided to go to the hospital to see a doctor.
The examination results show that she is in good physical condition, with a weight loss of 9 kilograms compared to a year ago. But the doctor told her that such a large amount of exercise can lead to a decrease in estrogen in the body, slow growth of endometrial cells, reduced menstrual bleeding, and even amenorrhea. The doctor gave her two options: one is to reduce exercise, restore normal estrogen secretion, and then restore normal menstruation; The other is to continue exercising, but must take estrogen. Ms. Bai does not want to take artificial estrogen and has decided to reduce her exercise to four times a week for 45 minutes each time. Three months later, her menstrual cycle returned to normal.
What is the reason for sudden amenorrhea?
There are many reasons for female amenorrhea. Do you know the reason why menstruation no longer occurs?
During menstruation, the femoral functional layer in the uterus falls off, and then begins to proliferate and repair from the basal layer. In any case, if the basal layer is damaged, the endometrium will lose its ability to repair. Even if the ovarian function is normal, menstruation will not come. If the basal layer of the endometrium is damaged during induced abortion, it can cause amenorrhea. In addition, there is no factory endometrium covering the uterine cavity, and the anterior and posterior walls can adhere. The damaged area of the basal layer of the endometrium varies, and the clinical manifestations also vary. If the basal layer is completely damaged and the anterior and posterior walls of the uterine cavity are completely adhered, the patient can have complete amenorrhea; If there are still some basal layers, it indicates a decrease in menstrual flow; If the adhesion site of the endometrium is close to the uterine opening and there is still a healthy endometrium in the adhesion site, menstrual abdominal pain, menstrual blood dripping, and even hematocele in the official cavity may occur due to poor menstrual blood flow; If the endometrium is not damaged and only damages the endometrium of the cervical canal, leading to adhesion of the cervical canal, severe periodic lower abdominal pain and no menstrual flow can occur