ALL ABOUT THE MENSTRUAL CYCLE
How it works and the hormones that control it. Women today have many more periods than their great-great grandmothers. A girl starting her periods today at around 13 years old can expect to have 400 periods before she reaches the menopause. In Victorian times, according to Dr Alan Riley, a British expert in sexual medicine, women had as few as 40 periods in their lifetime. The main reasons for the increase are:
- Girls in the Western world mature earlier than they have ever done before so they start their periods earlier.
- Women today have fewer babies than in the past when a baby every 12 to 18 months was not uncommon.
- Women don't breast-feed as much as their grandmothers did. (Breast-feeding is a natural suppressor of the normal menstrual cycle. Today women breast-feed for only a few months compared with two years or more in times past.)
- Women live longer than they used to. More women are surviving to the menopause than ever before.
It is only since women started having more and more regular cycles that problems such as PMS have become recognized. In the past PMS may not have been so common, or recognized, because women had so few periods. To understand PMS properly it is helpful to understand something of the normal menstrual cycle.
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Womens health
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