What is amenorrhea?
Amenorrhea is not having a menstrual period.
There are two main kinds of amenorrhea, primary and
secondary. Primary amenorrhea is not having menstrual
periods by the age of 16. Secondary amenorrhea is the
absence of 3 or more consecutive periods in a woman who has
had regular menstrual periods.
What is athletic amenorrhea?
Athletic amenorrhea is when a woman does not have periods
because she exercises very intensely and is very lean. Some
women with athletic amenorrhea stop having periods. Others
never get their first period until years after the age at
which most girls start menstruating. Some of these women
may never get a period until they are in their 20s.
How does it occur?
Intense exercise and extreme thinness may reduce the levels
of hormones that regulate a woman's periods. These
hormones, estrogen and progesterone, are important for
overall body health. Estrogen is especially vital for
healthy bones.
Athletic amenorrhea is often seen in sports that emphasize
thinness, such as gymnastics, figure skating, and
long-distance running.
What are the symptoms?
You do not have periods for 3 months or more.
Your bones may break more easily. A lack of estrogen leads
to a lack of calcium in your bones. This makes the bones
brittle and weak, a condition called osteoporosis. Intense
exercise puts extra stress on weak bones, leaving athletes
who have osteoporosis at risk for stress fractures. Young
women who have osteoporosis may never get enough calcium in
their bones as they grow and mature. As they get older,
their bones may break easily.
How is it diagnosed?
Your health care provider will do various tests, including a
pregnancy test, to find out why your periods have stopped or
why they never started. (Pregnancy is the most common
reason women miss periods.) He or she will talk to you
about your exercise patterns and eating habits.
Your health care provider may order a DEXA scan, a special
type of x-ray that measures the density of your bones to see
if you are developing osteoporosis.
How is it treated?
Athletic amenorrhea needs to be treated in several ways
because it often is a problem involving:
- too much exercise
- poor diet
- hormone imbalance.
To treat it:
- You may need to exercise less.
- Eat enough food to take in enough calories for your
workouts.
- Make sure you have enough calcium in your diet.
- You may need to take birth control pills or other forms
of estrogen and progesterone to restore hormone balance.
You will then have periods again.
If you are sexually active you can become pregnant, even if
you have amenorrhea. Take precautions if you do not want
to become pregnant.
How is it prevented?
A well-balanced diet with enough calories helps prevent
athletic amenorrhea. It is important to recognize when you
are exercising too much and eating too little.
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
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