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View Full Version : Electrical Shocks to the Skin: Menopause



itself
09-08-2010, 04:04 PM
Yes, you heard me correctly. I've been getting zaps of electricity on my shoulders and neck...checked google and with my chiropractor, a symptom of menopause. Also you might feel like bugs are crawling under your skin, another wonderful symptom.

Thank goodness for menopause support herbs by Pure Encapsulations. Symptoms are alleviated, so per the instructions, I will take 3 weeks on, and then take a break.

It's a very uncomfortable feeling for sure. I thought I had shingles! It's weird, I turned 49 and I am definitely going into full blown menopause. Heavy duty hot flashes, irregular periods the whole nine yards.

Poor women! Monthly periods, we bear children, perimenopause and menopause. We should be worshipped as saints!

Zen
09-08-2010, 04:24 PM
maybe it's bedbugs
;)

itself
09-08-2010, 04:30 PM
My chiropractor and I joked about that since there is a national epidemic of bed bugs!!!

KnottedYet
09-08-2010, 05:35 PM
I get that, too.

I don't like it, but it hasn't been so bad that I've needed to address it. It does make me want to rip all my clothes off and scratch, however... The hot flashes make me want to rip my clothes off, too. I sense a trend here.

My mom assures me it will continue to get worse over the next few years.

Oh, goodie.

IFjane
09-08-2010, 06:17 PM
I don't get the electric shocks but do get the itches sometimes. Drives me crazy! Hot flashes, too - but only if I am idle (like sitting in a meeting), and at night.

I am 56 and had a complete hysterectomy 3 1/2 years ago. The hot flashes started about 6 weeks post surgery and have continued, though they are not too bad. I asked my (now 87 year old) mom how long her hot flashes lasted and she said, "Oh I think they stopped a year or two ago." GREAT! :eek::eek:

PamNY
09-08-2010, 06:47 PM
If it cheers anybody up, I had no menopausal symptoms whatsoever so maybe they aren't guaranteed.

My mother had nothing either, so maybe it's hereditary but expectations might play a role, so keep that in mind. I don't really know what a hot flash is but I guess I'd know if I had one.

Zen
09-08-2010, 07:03 PM
I had one hot flash.

It felt like someone had made a voodoo doll of me and threw it into a fire.
Lasted about 30 seconds.

That was it. Thank the goddesses.

shootingstar
09-08-2010, 08:13 PM
Itchiness...hmmmm I got this arm rash which I've never had before. It's going away. Somehow I think it's corn dust from peeling off the husk...or stress, which I won't go on a venting jag. :rolleyes:

My rare 5 min. hot flash..usually early in morning lying in bed. It feels like a internal blush in the face.

Then gone. :o:D

ny biker
09-08-2010, 08:41 PM
Hot flashes are my new pms symptom. But I don't get cramps anymore.

OakLeaf
09-09-2010, 04:48 AM
When I quit soy I had a few months of frequent but very brief hot flashes.

It was a nice respite from being freezing all the time.

Now, I might get one every 2-3 weeks.

And now that the weather's starting to turn, I'm freezing again. :p

I keep getting thicker around the middle. But it could be that's my own d*mn fault ... in perimenopause I was a gym rat with a lot of upper body strength. Lately I can't stand a workout that doesn't involve sunshine, so while I'm three pounds lighter, and running mileage that I couldn't even have imagined three years ago, I've lost a good bit of muscle mass in the arms, shoulders and upper back - it might have been that muscle that was keeping the menopot off.

Biciclista
09-09-2010, 09:04 AM
been getting hot flashes for at least 15 years. but they're not earth shattering, there are far worse things.
I have skin hallucinations. I will be riding down the street and it will feel like a drop of water has hit me. I will feel that place and there will be nothing, no dampness.
happens once every month or so...

stella2
09-09-2010, 09:58 AM
Personally I'm loving HRT :cool:

azfiddle
09-09-2010, 10:51 AM
me too. Even with the HRT, I sometimes wake up at night feeling warm, but nothing like the full on, sweating and tingling symptoms I was having.

KnottedYet
09-09-2010, 05:44 PM
Most of my hot flashes are at 2:00 or 3:00 in the morning. I've got a routine now, where I rip off my clothes and fire up my iPod to read in the dark until the flash stops. Then I put my clothes back on, get back under the covers, and go right back to sleep.

The problem is the ones I have at work... I have to keep my clothes on.

malkin
09-09-2010, 06:53 PM
I have that zappy thing sometimes. I call it "Sparky."

The other symptoms, and maybe that one too, are well accounted for by Dr. Zen's voodoo hypothesis.

channlluv
09-09-2010, 07:46 PM
Those of you doing HRT, is it bioidentical? I've got an appointment with my doctor next week to discuss it.

Roxy

malkin
09-10-2010, 06:21 AM
"Bioidentical" seems like such a made up word to me.

withm
09-10-2010, 08:18 AM
HRT is a godsend!

Biciclista
09-10-2010, 08:45 AM
about HRT, it's a short term solution. How many years are you going to take it? You will probably live to be 80...

stella2
09-10-2010, 12:16 PM
I don't know and I'm not concerned about it yet. By the time I have been on it for several years (currently been on it about 6 months), they may have developed a very long term option. If not, I retire in 9 years and can accommodate my symptoms. Right now I have to work, be able to think straight and concentrate, so for now it's a Godsend :)

I don't know what bioidentical HRT is!

IFjane
09-10-2010, 06:17 PM
been getting hot flashes for at least 15 years. but they're not earth shattering, there are far worse things.
I have skin hallucinations. I will be riding down the street and it will feel like a drop of water has hit me. I will feel that place and there will be nothing, no dampness.
happens once every month or so...

Me too! I hadn't thought about it until you mentioned it, Mimi.

My hot flashes never last more than 30 seconds or so, so I cannot complain. I am at high risk for breast cancer so I refuse to use HRT. Been going cold turkey since my surgery and it's ok. I can take the heat, even if it lasts until I'm 80!

Biciclista
09-10-2010, 06:22 PM
Me too! I hadn't thought about it until you mentioned it, Mimi.

My hot flashes never last more than 30 seconds or so, so I cannot complain. I am at high risk for breast cancer so I refuse to use HRT. Been going cold turkey since my surgery and it's ok. I can take the heat, even if it lasts until I'm 80!

oh wow, i'm not alone!! thanks for letting me know, Jane!


I don't know and I'm not concerned about it yet. By the time I have been on it for several years (currently been on it about 6 months), they may have developed a very long term option. If not, I retire in 9 years and can accommodate my symptoms. Right now I have to work, be able to think straight and concentrate, so for now it's a Godsend :)

Stella, I'd be very surprised if your doctor lets you use HRT for ten years! at least in the states, the "rule" is 2 years.

KnottedYet
09-10-2010, 06:38 PM
Stella, I'd be very surprised if your doctor lets you use HRT for ten years! at least in the states, the "rule" is 2 years.

Yeah, I'm seeing it used in my patients as a temporary bridge, just to get a woman over the hump. Not as a way of life!

Dogmama
09-10-2010, 07:48 PM
Yeah, I'm seeing it used in my patients as a temporary bridge, just to get a woman over the hump. Not as a way of life!

I tried HRT & it made me grumpy like PMS. Tried all different formulations, more/less estrogen,progesterone, testosterone, etc. My hot flashes literally make me sweat all over. I didn't know I had sweat glands in my knees. It's embarrassing to suddenly have wet patches on your blouse. I get these ganzo flashes about 3-4 times a day. And let's not even talk about night sweats. You'd think I'd learn how to swim after all of this. In short, I'd gladly trade these for electrical sensations.

OTOH, some gyns will prescribe Effexor, an SNRI that seems to help some women with flashes. But, then you have to try to get off of Effexor - not an easy thing.

I haven't had a period in over three years and sometimes I think the flashes might be very slowly abating. I can hope.

azfiddle
09-10-2010, 08:24 PM
I toughed it out for almost 2 years. The really intense flashes that left me with beads of sweat and tingling scaled back somewhat after a while, but I was waking up 3-4 times a night and was having a really hard time with sleep deprivation and teaching middle school. I have been on HRT for 1 1/2 years now. Until recently, my sleep was much more consistent, but lately I'm waking up at 4:30 or 5 am sometimes when the alarm isn't set until 6:15. I still get occasional warm waves- especially early in the morning.

stella2
09-11-2010, 09:18 AM
Stella, I'd be very surprised if your doctor lets you use HRT for ten years! at least in the states, the "rule" is 2 years. it's 5 years in the UK, and things move on all the time with research in this field, so I'll see how it goes.

This is an up to date information paper for women wondering about HRT. Its produced by well respected UK specialists associated with the advice/support website menopausematters. Might be worth a read for anyone wondering abbot the issues. http://www.menopausematters.co.uk/pdf/HRTandYou.pdf

Bike Chick
09-12-2010, 10:06 AM
I guess I'm breaking all the rules. I had a complete hysterectomy at age 29 (22 years ago) and have been on HRT ever since. My ob/gyn scaled it back several years ago to a lower dose but I plan to stay on it as long as she will write me a script for it! I still have hot flashes occasionally but the positives outweigh the negatives for me right now. FWIW, I use the FemRing. It's wonderful! No pills to take (or forget). Just a simple ring placed in the vagina and replaced every 3 months. I love it.

KnottedYet
09-12-2010, 10:11 AM
Surgical menopause is a very different situation.

I think you are allowed to break the rules! :D

Bike Chick
09-12-2010, 10:20 AM
Surgical menopause is a very different situation.

I think you are allowed to break the rules! :D

It was a b*t#$ at 29 too!! I couldn't take hormones for 6 months after the surgery so I had giant doses of hot flashes, night sweats and mood swings.