The Hormone Cafe: Blog

with Dr. Sarah Pederson

Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI): Early Menopause, Hormones & Fertility

Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI), also called premature menopause, occurs when ovarian function declines before age 40.

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.

📍 Located in Westminster, Colorado
🌐 Learn more or book a consultation: verafertility.com
📧 Connect with us on Instagram & TikTok: @verafertility
🎧 Listen to all episodes of The Hormone Café Podcast on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and YouTube

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