What Primary Ovarian Insufficiency Is
POI occurs when:
- Ovarian function declines before age 40
- Estrogen, progesterone, and testosterone levels are very low
- Brain hormones (FSH, LH) are very high
- Periods become irregular or stop completely
Other terms include premature menopause or premature ovarian failure.
How POI Is Diagnosed
Diagnosis requires:
- Multiple hormone tests over time
- Very low estrogen, progesterone, and testosterone
- Very high FSH and LH
- Assessment of egg quality
Patterns are more important than a single snapshot—repeated testing ensures accuracy.
Why Brain Hormones Are High
When ovaries stop responding, the brain:
- Increases FSH and LH to stimulate estrogen production
- Contributes to fatigue, brain fog, and exhaustion
Replacing estrogen helps calm this feedback loop and restore balance.
Why POI Is Different From Natural Menopause
Unlike menopause in the 50s:
- Some ovarian function may remain
- Occasional ovulation is possible
- Fertility may still be achievable with support
This creates both opportunities and unique medical needs.
Why Estrogen Replacement Is Critical
Estrogen isn’t just about cycles—it:
- Protects bone density
- Supports cardiovascular health
- Reduces inflammation
- Nourishes cells throughout the body
Without estrogen, women with POI face early bone loss, increased heart disease risk, and accelerated aging.
Hormone Therapy: Not Optional in POI
- Estrogen replacement is medically necessary
- Goal: replace physiological levels (~2 mg/day)
- Therapy continues until natural menopause age (~50–51)
This is long-term, physiologic replacement—not short-term symptom control.
How Hormones Are Replaced
Treatment may include:
- Estrogen: patch or oral
- Progesterone: always paired with estrogen
- Testosterone: for low energy, muscle loss, or libido issues
Doses are personalized, titrated carefully, and adjusted over time.
Ongoing Monitoring & Dynamic Needs
Follow-up includes:
- Hormone levels every 3–6 months
- Symptom tracking
- Dose adjustments during stress, illness, or exercise
Patients learn to manage hormone needs proactively and feel empowered in their care.
Causes of POI
Potential causes include:
- Autoimmune conditions (thyroid disease, lupus, celiac)
- Genetic conditions (X chromosome abnormalities)
- Childhood infections (e.g., mumps)
- Poor ovarian blood flow or anatomical differences
- Sometimes, no clear cause is found
Supporting Health & Fertility
POI care also focuses on:
- Bone density (DEXA scan)
- Cardiovascular health
- Vaginal health with estrogen therapy
- Blood flow and inflammation support
- Fertility strategies for possible ovulation
About 5–10% of patients may ovulate spontaneously, and hormone support can improve outcomes.
The Emotional Side of POI
POI can feel:
- Unfair, isolating, overwhelming
Dr. Sarah emphasizes:
- Focus on your body’s needs
- This diagnosis is not a life sentence
- With the right plan, patients can feel energized, empowered, and excellent
Key Takeaways
- POI is menopause before age 40
- Estrogen replacement is essential for long-term health
- Hormone therapy is individualized and monitored
- Fertility may still be possible
- Bone, heart, and vaginal health require attention
- Feeling amazing is achievable even with POI
Next Steps
If you’ve gone long stretches without a period, experience early menopausal symptoms, or have been diagnosed with POI, a comprehensive hormone evaluation is critical.