A. The average age of menopause in the United States is 51 but the average range is from 45 to 55. Even going through menopause at age 40 is considered “normal”. Menopause is usually a transition that lasts for years and periods don’t usually stop abruptly. However, given you age of 47 and the fact that a portion of your ovary could have been removed with the cyst, you might not have a lot of
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Polycystic ovary disease tissue remaining. The fact that you have had hot flashes and other symptoms suggests that at some time over the next year or so, it is likely that periods would have become more irregular even if you didn’t have the surgery. The typical pattern is they get lighter, then they get closer together and then they get farther apart. This isn’t true for everyone, of course, but it is typical.
Now is a good time to discuss routine things that occur around menopause, like getting a bone density, taking calcium if you aren’t already, getting mammograms and a colonoscopy. In the meantime, wait and see if your periods come back. They likely will, at least for a while.
Machelle M. Seibel, MD