All symptoms

By symptom

Perimenopause.

The years when the body's hormonal rhythm changes, before the period stops.

What’s actually going on

How I think about this.

Perimenopause is the multi-year window before menopause when ovarian function starts to fluctuate. In conventional care it gets read as “wait until you stop bleeding,” but the symptoms start a decade earlier and respond to physiological work right now. The shape I see most is rising FSH and falling progesterone first, with estrogen swinging higher than baseline before it falls. That hormonal volatility, more than the average level, drives the symptoms.

The presentations cluster: sleep that stops working, mood symptoms that feel unfamiliar, weight that shifts around the middle, hot flashes that come and go, libido that drops, joint stiffness, the brain fog people sometimes call “pregnancy brain” even though they are not pregnant. Each of these has a hormonal driver and a non-hormonal driver, and the read tells me which is dominant.

The assumption that perimenopause is just “getting older” is one of the most expensive mistakes in conventional medicine. The decade between 40 and the last period is when the right read changes the next thirty years.

The physician’s lens

How I read this in practice.

I read perimenopause across the full endocrine system, not just a single estrogen level. Sex hormones with binding proteins (SHBG often shifts dramatically in this window). The full thyroid panel with reverse T3, because thyroid drift hides under estrogen volatility. Insulin and HbA1c, because insulin sensitivity changes in perimenopause and the weight pattern follows. Cortisol across the day, because the system is under more stress than it tolerated at 30. Menstrual phase recorded so the timing of the draw makes sense.

What I’d test first

The data that explains it.

Perimenopause needs the endocrine system read as a system. Sex hormones with binding proteins, the thyroid axis, adrenal output, and insulin together. The metabolomic panel adds the upstream nutrient picture that often explains why the symptoms are hitting hard for this person and not another.

While you wait

Moves worth making before testing.

These are the levers I’d pull while we set up the workup. Most of them produce real signal inside two weeks.

  1. Track your cycle if you are still bleeding. Note the symptoms by day. The data improves every test we order.
  2. Lift heavy two to three times a week. The hormonal response to resistance training matters more in perimenopause than at any prior life stage.
  3. Cut alcohol for two weeks. Estrogen metabolism alone makes this worth doing in this window.
  4. Anchor your sleep schedule. Sleep architecture changes in perimenopause and recovers fastest with a fixed wake time.

If two weeks of the basics doesn’t move the needle, that is exactly the kind of presentation a Precision Call exists for. Your biology is telling you something the lifestyle layer cannot fix on its own.

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Want me to read your data?

A complimentary 30-minute call by phone or video with me. You tell me what is going on. I tell you how I would approach it. You decide if I am the right physician for you.