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Menopause basics
Menopause
Menopause is a normal life stage, but the symptoms and questions around it are often not simple. This page explains what menopause means, how it is diagnosed, what symptoms are common, when tests help, and when treatment is worth discussing.
Quick definition
Menopause is diagnosed after 12 months without a period, provided there is no other clear cause. The average age is around 51, but the timing varies, and symptoms often begin during the transition before periods stop completely.
If bleeding happens after menopause, use the post-menopausal bleeding pathway.
What menopause means
Menopause is the point reached after 12 months without a period. It is diagnosed retrospectively, which means you only know you have reached it once a full year has passed with no bleeding.
For many women, the bigger story is the transition before that point. Hormone levels fluctuate during perimenopause, so symptoms may start while periods are still happening. That is why someone can feel very different even before menopause has technically been reached.
- Perimenopause is the transition before menopause.
- Menopause is reached after 12 months without a period.
- Postmenopause is the phase after that, when estrogen levels remain lower.
- If menopause seems to happen early, it is worth reviewing rather than assuming it is routine.
Important: menopause is normal, but symptoms that affect sleep, mood, confidence, sex, bladder comfort, or daily life still deserve proper care.
Common symptoms after menopause
Not every woman has the same pattern. Some mainly notice hot flushes. Others mainly notice sleep change, vaginal dryness, or bladder symptoms.
Hot flushes and night sweats
These are among the most common symptoms and may continue into the early postmenopausal years.
Sleep, energy and concentration
Waking at night, lighter sleep, low energy, and brain fog are common and can be very disruptive.
Mood and resilience
Irritability, low mood, or anxiety may become more noticeable, especially when sleep is poor.
Vaginal dryness, bladder symptoms and tissue changes
Dryness, recurrent irritation, discomfort with sex, urinary urgency, and bladder symptoms often become more noticeable after menopause. Doctors often group these symptoms under genitourinary syndrome of menopause.
Bone and heart health
Menopause is also a useful time to review long-term bone protection, cardiovascular risk, blood pressure, and general wellbeing.
Bleeding after menopause
Any bleeding after menopause should be checked. It should not simply be put down to hormones or age.
Do I need tests?
Step 1
Start with the history
In many women in the usual age range, the period pattern and symptom pattern are the most useful parts of diagnosis.
Step 2
Blood tests are not routine for everyone
FSH or other hormone tests are not the answer for every woman with suspected menopause. They are more useful in selected situations than as a blanket rule.
Step 3
Early or unusual cases need closer review
If menopause seems to be happening before the usual age range, or the story is not clear, blood tests and further assessment become more helpful.
Step 4
Symptoms still need care
Even if the diagnosis is straightforward, the next step is still to decide what needs treatment now and what needs longer-term planning.
When tests matter more: menopause before 45, suspected primary ovarian insufficiency, uncertainty about diagnosis, or symptoms that may have another cause.
When to book a review
- Symptoms are affecting sleep, concentration, sex, confidence, work, or daily life.
- You are unsure whether symptoms are due to perimenopause, menopause, or something else.
- You think menopause may be happening earlier than expected.
- You mainly have dryness, bladder symptoms, or discomfort with sex.
- You want to discuss HRT or non-hormonal treatment properly rather than guessing.
- You have any bleeding after menopause.
You do not need to wait until symptoms become severe before asking for help.
Where to go next
Hormone therapy
Understand who HRT may suit, what the benefits and risks are, and how route and progesterone choices work.
Non-hormonal treatment
If you prefer not to use hormones, or should avoid them, there are still useful treatment options.
Vaginal dryness and bladder symptoms
If dryness, urinary symptoms, or sex discomfort are the main issues, targeted treatment for genitourinary syndrome of menopause may help more than systemic treatment.
Common questions
Frequently asked questions
How is menopause diagnosed?
Menopause is diagnosed after 12 months without a period, provided there is no other clear cause.
Do I need an FSH test?
Not always. In many women in the usual age range, the symptom and bleeding history is more useful than a routine hormone test.
Can symptoms start before periods stop?
Yes. Many symptoms begin in perimenopause, when hormones fluctuate but periods are still happening.
What if menopause happens early?
That is worth assessing rather than assuming it is routine. Earlier menopause can matter for long-term bone and cardiovascular health.
Is bleeding after menopause ever normal?
No bleeding after menopause should be ignored. Even light spotting should be checked at least once.
What if my main problem is dryness or bladder symptoms?
Those symptoms are often part of genitourinary syndrome of menopause and may respond best to targeted local treatment rather than a general menopause plan.
Need a clear plan? We can work through whether this is perimenopause or menopause, what still needs checking, and which treatment route fits your symptoms best.