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Amenorrhea Treatment in Goregaon, Mumbai: Causes, Diagnosis & What to Do Next

Author:

Dr. Dimple Doshi (MBBS, MD, DGO)
Lady Gynecologist & Laparoscopic Surgeon
27+ years’ experience
20,000+ surgeries completed

No periods, missed periods, or periods that suddenly stop can feel confusing, especially when pregnancy tests are negative.
Many women worry whether the cause is PCOS, thyroid, stress, low ovarian reserve, or something structural.
In my clinical experience, amenorrhea should be evaluated calmly and step-by-step — not ignored or self-treated.
This guide explains primary and secondary amenorrhea, Müllerian abnormalities, diagnosis, treatment options, fertility impact, and when to consult a gynecologist.

What Is Amenorrhea?

Amenorrhea means absence of menstrual periods during reproductive age, either because periods never started or because they stopped later.

Amenorrhea is not a disease by itself.

It is a clinical symptom that tells us the menstrual pathway needs evaluation.

This pathway includes:

  • brain
  • hypothalamus
  • pituitary gland
  • ovaries
  • uterus
  • cervix
  • vagina
  • thyroid hormones
  • prolactin
  • nutrition
  • body weight
  • emotional stress

Amenorrhea can happen due to many reasons, from normal pregnancy to PCOS, thyroid disease, high prolactin, stress, weight loss, premature ovarian insufficiency, Müllerian abnormalities or uterine scarring.

ACOG advises evaluation if periods stop for more than 3 months without explanation.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
A missed period is not always serious, but if periods stop repeatedly or for several months, the cause should be identified instead of taking random medicines.

Amenorrhea is mainly divided into primary amenorrhea and secondary amenorrhea depending on whether periods ever started.

Primary amenorrhea

Primary amenorrhea means:

  • periods have not started by age 15, or
  • periods have not started within about 3 years after breast development

ACOG states that primary amenorrhea evaluation should be considered if menarche has not occurred by age 15 years or within 3 years after thelarche.

Common causes include:

  • delayed puberty
  • Turner syndrome
  • Müllerian agenesis
  • MRKH syndrome
  • absent uterus
  • imperforate hymen
  • transverse vaginal septum
  • cervical agenesis
  • hormonal problems
  • hypothalamic or pituitary causes

Secondary amenorrhea

Secondary amenorrhea means:

  • periods started earlier
  • then stopped for 3 months in previously regular cycles, or
  • stopped for 6 months in previously irregular cycles

A systematic review in American Family Physician defines secondary amenorrhea as cessation of previously regular menses for 3 months or previously irregular menses for 6 months.

Common causes include:

  • pregnancy
  • PCOS
  • thyroid disorder
  • high prolactin
  • stress
  • sudden weight loss
  • eating disorder
  • excessive exercise
  • premature ovarian insufficiency
  • menopause transition
  • uterine adhesions after D&C
  • medicines

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
The first question is whether periods never started or started and then stopped. This helps us decide the correct evaluation pathway.

You should consult a gynecologist if periods stop for 3 months, never start by age 15, or are absent with pain or fertility concern.

Book a consultation if:

  • no periods for 3 months
  • no periods by age 15
  • missed periods with negative pregnancy test
  • irregular cycles with acne or facial hair
  • no periods with weight gain
  • no periods after major weight loss
  • no periods with milky nipple discharge
  • no periods with headache or vision changes
  • no periods with pelvic pain
  • monthly abdominal pain but no bleeding
  • no periods after D&C, abortion or uterine procedure
  • difficulty conceiving
  • hot flushes before age 40
  • history of chemotherapy, ovarian surgery or radiation

Important clinical clue

A young girl with normal breast development but no periods needs evaluation for Müllerian abnormalities or outflow tract obstruction.

No period for 3 months? Don’t ignore it.
A missed period is a signal — let us find the cause clearly and calmly.
Consult Dr. Dimple Doshi at Vardaan Hospital, Goregaon West, Mumbai.

Amenorrhea can be caused by pregnancy, PCOS, thyroid disease, prolactin excess, ovarian insufficiency, stress or structural abnormalities.

Common causes include:

1. Pregnancy

Pregnancy is the most common cause of secondary amenorrhea.

ASRM states that pregnancy must be at the forefront of the differential diagnosis for secondary amenorrhea.

2. PCOS

PCOS can cause:

  • delayed periods
  • absent periods
  • acne
  • facial hair
  • weight gain
  • insulin resistance
  • infertility

3. Thyroid disorder

Both hypothyroidism and hyperthyroidism can disturb menstrual rhythm.

4. High prolactin

High prolactin may cause:

  • absent periods
  • infertility
  • milky nipple discharge
  • low libido
  • headache or visual symptoms in selected cases

5. Premature ovarian insufficiency

POI may cause:

  • irregular periods
  • absent periods
  • high FSH
  • low estradiol
  • hot flushes
  • infertility before age 40

6. Functional hypothalamic amenorrhea

This may happen due to:

  • stress
  • under-eating
  • sudden weight loss
  • excessive exercise
  • eating disorder
  • low body fat
  • poor sleep

7. Müllerian abnormalities and outflow obstruction

These are important causes of primary amenorrhea.

They include:

  • Müllerian agenesis
  • MRKH syndrome
  • absent uterus
  • absent upper vagina
  • cervical agenesis
  • imperforate hymen
  • transverse vaginal septum

8. Uterine scarring

Periods may stop after:

  • D&C
  • repeated abortions
  • postpartum curettage
  • uterine infection
  • genital tuberculosis
  • Asherman syndrome
  • endometrial ablation

ASRM notes that anatomical causes should be considered when amenorrhea follows uterine instrumentation, endometrial ablation or intrauterine procedures.

9. Medicines

Some medicines may affect cycles:

  • antipsychotics
  • antidepressants
  • chemotherapy
  • hormonal contraception
  • GnRH analogues
  • opioids
  • some blood pressure medicines

10. Natural causes

Amenorrhea can be normal during:

  • pregnancy
  • breastfeeding
  • before puberty
  • after menopause

Yes. Müllerian abnormalities can cause primary amenorrhea when the uterus, cervix or upper vagina does not develop normally.

This is a very important cause of primary amenorrhea, especially when the girl has otherwise normal puberty.

In Müllerian abnormalities, the ovaries may be functioning normally.

So the patient may have:

  • normal breast development
  • normal pubic hair
  • normal external genitalia
  • normal female hormones
  • normal ovarian function
  • but no menstrual bleeding by age 15

ACOG notes that patients with Müllerian agenesis are often identified during evaluation for primary amenorrhea despite otherwise typical growth and pubertal development.

What are common Müllerian or outflow tract causes?

Important causes include:

  • Müllerian agenesis
  • MRKH syndrome
  • absent uterus
  • absent cervix
  • absent or short upper vagina
  • cervical agenesis
  • transverse vaginal septum
  • imperforate hymen
  • obstructed menstrual flow

What is MRKH syndrome?

MRKH syndrome is a condition where the uterus and upper vagina may be absent or underdeveloped, while ovaries and female hormones are usually normal.

A girl with MRKH may have:

  • normal height
  • normal breast development
  • normal ovarian hormones
  • normal external genitalia
  • no periods
  • absent or very small uterus on imaging

What is the important red flag?

Monthly lower abdominal pain with no bleeding may suggest obstructed menstrual blood.

This can happen in:

  • imperforate hymen
  • transverse vaginal septum
  • cervical obstruction
  • obstructed Müllerian anomaly

The girl may complain of:

  • cyclic pelvic pain
  • lower abdominal heaviness
  • urinary difficulty
  • constipation
  • backache
  • no visible menstrual bleeding

This needs timely evaluation.

Why kidney evaluation may be needed?

Some Müllerian abnormalities can be associated with kidney or urinary tract abnormalities.

Older ASRM guidance notes that Müllerian agenesis may be associated with urogenital malformations such as unilateral renal agenesis, pelvic kidney, horseshoe kidney, hydronephrosis and ureteral duplication.

So evaluation may include:

  • pelvic ultrasound
  • MRI pelvis if needed
  • kidney/urinary tract ultrasound in selected cases
  • hormone profile
  • careful counselling

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
If a girl has normal breast development but no periods by age 15, the uterus, cervix and vaginal outflow tract should be assessed carefully and sensitively.

Yes. Pregnancy is the most common cause of missed periods and should be ruled out first in reproductive-age women.

Even when pregnancy seems unlikely, it is safer to confirm.

Testing may include:

  • urine pregnancy test
  • serum beta-hCG
  • ultrasound if indicated

Pregnancy-related missed periods may be associated with:

  • nausea
  • breast tenderness
  • fatigue
  • increased urination
  • spotting
  • pelvic pain if ectopic pregnancy is a concern

Red flag

Missed period with pain, fainting or bleeding needs urgent evaluation to rule out ectopic pregnancy.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
Always rule out pregnancy first in secondary amenorrhea. Even if the test is negative, persistent missed periods still need evaluation.

Yes. PCOS is one of the common causes of delayed, irregular or absent periods in reproductive-age women.

In PCOS, ovulation may not happen regularly.

This leads to:

  • delayed periods
  • no periods
  • heavy bleeding after delay
  • acne
  • facial hair
  • scalp hair thinning
  • weight gain
  • insulin resistance
  • infertility
  • thickened endometrium in some women

PCOS-related amenorrhea needs proper care because prolonged anovulation may increase the risk of endometrial thickening.

Treatment may include:

  • weight optimisation if overweight
  • insulin resistance correction
  • cycle regulation
  • progesterone withdrawal bleeding when needed
  • hormonal therapy if suitable
  • ovulation induction if pregnancy is desired
  • lifestyle correction

Yes. Stress, under-eating, sudden weight loss or excessive exercise can suppress the brain–ovary rhythm and stop periods.

This is called functional hypothalamic amenorrhea.

It may be seen in:

  • students under intense stress
  • athletes
  • dancers
  • women on crash diets
  • low BMI patients
  • eating disorders
  • sudden major illness
  • emotional trauma
  • high work stress with poor sleep

The body senses low energy availability.

Then it reduces reproductive hormone signaling.

Treatment may need:

  • nutrition correction
  • weight restoration if underweight
  • exercise moderation
  • psychological support
  • sleep correction
  • calcium and vitamin D care
  • bone-density assessment when prolonged

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
Periods may stop when the body is under physical or emotional stress. The treatment is not always hormones — sometimes nutrition, rest, and weight restoration are equally important.

Amenorrhea is diagnosed by history, pregnancy test, hormone evaluation, ultrasound and targeted tests based on suspected cause.

The evaluation includes:

Menstrual history

  • age at first period
  • whether periods ever started
  • last menstrual period
  • previous cycle pattern
  • duration of missed periods
  • pain or cyclical symptoms

Puberty history

Especially in primary amenorrhea:

  • breast development
  • pubic hair development
  • growth pattern
  • height
  • delayed puberty features
  • family history

Medical history

  • pregnancy possibility
  • weight change
  • exercise level
  • stress
  • diet
  • medications
  • thyroid disease
  • diabetes
  • galactorrhea
  • acne or hirsutism
  • hot flushes
  • previous uterine procedure

Examination

  • BMI
  • signs of androgen excess
  • thyroid enlargement
  • breast discharge
  • pubertal development
  • abdominal mass or pain
  • pelvic examination when appropriate

ASRM’s 2024 committee opinion supports a stepwise evaluation, with history, reproductive hormone profile and pelvic ultrasound helping streamline the diagnosis.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
Amenorrhea diagnosis starts with careful listening. Your cycle history, weight change, stress, symptoms, and previous procedures often give important clues.

Basic tests usually include pregnancy test, TSH, prolactin, FSH, LH, estradiol and pelvic ultrasound depending on age and symptoms.

Common tests include:

Test

Why It Is Done

Urine pregnancy test / beta-hCG

To rule out pregnancy

TSH

To detect thyroid disorder

Prolactin

To detect hyperprolactinemia

FSH

To assess ovarian function

LH

To assess PCOS or pituitary pattern

Estradiol

To assess estrogen status

AMH

To assess ovarian reserve when needed

Androgen profile

If acne, hirsutism or PCOS suspected

Pelvic ultrasound

To assess uterus, ovaries, endometrium

MRI pelvis

If Müllerian anomaly is suspected

Kidney ultrasound

In selected Müllerian abnormalities

Progesterone challenge test

In selected cases

MRI pituitary

If high prolactin or neurological signs

Karyotype

In selected primary amenorrhea cases

DEXA scan

If prolonged estrogen deficiency suspected

The test selection should be personalised.

Not every patient needs every test.

Amenorrhea treatment depends on the cause: pregnancy, PCOS, thyroid disease, prolactin excess, low weight, POI or structural problems.

Treatment is cause-based.

If pregnancy is the cause

Care depends on:

  • intrauterine pregnancy
  • ectopic pregnancy risk
  • bleeding
  • pain
  • patient’s pregnancy plan

If PCOS is the cause

Treatment may include:

  • lifestyle correction
  • weight management
  • insulin resistance treatment
  • cyclic progesterone
  • combined hormonal pills if suitable
  • endometrial protection
  • ovulation induction if pregnancy is desired

If thyroid disease is the cause

Correcting thyroid levels may restore cycles.

If prolactin is high

Treatment depends on the cause.

It may include:

  • repeat fasting prolactin
  • medication review
  • pituitary evaluation
  • dopamine agonist therapy in selected cases

If stress or weight loss is the cause

Treatment may include:

  • nutrition correction
  • weight gain if underweight
  • reduced over-exercise
  • psychological support
  • sleep correction
  • bone protection

If POI is the cause

Treatment may include:

  • HRT if suitable
  • bone-health care
  • fertility counselling
  • vitamin D and calcium care
  • long-term monitoring

If Müllerian abnormality or outflow obstruction is the cause

Treatment depends on the specific abnormality.

Options may include:

  • careful counselling
  • imaging confirmation
  • pain management if obstructed flow
  • surgical correction for obstructive lesions when appropriate
  • specialist referral for complex Müllerian anomalies
  • reproductive counselling
  • fertility guidance

For example:

  • imperforate hymen may need a minor corrective procedure
  • transverse vaginal septum may need surgical management
  • MRKH syndrome needs sensitive counselling, anatomy assessment and long-term reproductive guidance

If uterine scarring is suspected

Further evaluation may include:

  • ultrasound
  • saline sonography
  • hysteroscopy guidance
  • adhesiolysis if indicated

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
Amenorrhea treatment should never be “one tablet for all.” The right treatment depends on whether the cause is hormonal, ovarian, uterine, structural, nutritional, or pregnancy-related.

Yes. Amenorrhea may affect fertility because absent periods often mean ovulation is absent, irregular or blocked by structural causes.

Pregnancy becomes difficult when ovulation is not happening regularly.

Common fertility-related causes include:

  • PCOS
  • hypothalamic amenorrhea
  • high prolactin
  • thyroid disorder
  • POI
  • uterine adhesions
  • Müllerian abnormalities

The fertility impact depends on the cause.

For example:

  • PCOS-related amenorrhea may improve with ovulation induction
  • high prolactin-related amenorrhea may improve after treatment
  • hypothalamic amenorrhea may improve with nutrition and weight restoration
  • POI needs early fertility counselling
  • MRKH has normal ovaries but absent/underdeveloped uterus, so reproductive counselling is different

At Vardaan Hospital, Dr. Dimple Doshi can evaluate the cause of missed periods and guide you toward the correct fertility pathway.

Trying to conceive but periods are absent or irregular?
Early evaluation can save valuable time.
Book fertility guidance with Dr. Dimple Doshi at Vardaan Hospital.

Untreated amenorrhea may affect fertility, bone health, endometrial safety, emotional wellbeing and long-term hormonal health.

Possible complications depend on the cause.

Low estrogen-related risks

Seen in hypothalamic amenorrhea or POI:

  • low bone density
  • osteopenia
  • osteoporosis
  • vaginal dryness
  • painful intercourse
  • mood changes
  • hot flushes

PCOS-related risks

Due to prolonged anovulation:

  • irregular heavy bleeding
  • endometrial thickening
  • infertility
  • metabolic syndrome
  • insulin resistance
  • type 2 diabetes risk

Müllerian or outflow obstruction-related risks

If menstrual blood is obstructed, it may cause:

  • severe cyclical pain
  • hematocolpos
  • hematometra
  • endometriosis-like pelvic pain
  • infection risk in rare cases
  • urinary or bowel pressure symptoms

Pituitary-related risks

If high prolactin is due to pituitary pathology:

  • headache
  • visual symptoms
  • infertility
  • low estrogen symptoms

So amenorrhea should be treated as a clinical signal, not just a cycle inconvenience.

Bring your period calendar, pregnancy test, hormone reports, ultrasound scans and medication history for accurate diagnosis.

Helpful information includes:

  • date of last period
  • whether periods ever started
  • usual cycle length
  • duration of missed periods
  • pregnancy possibility
  • weight change
  • diet pattern
  • exercise routine
  • stress history
  • acne or facial hair
  • nipple discharge
  • hot flushes
  • cyclic monthly pain without bleeding
  • previous D&C or abortion
  • breastfeeding history
  • contraceptive history
  • previous thyroid or prolactin reports
  • ultrasound report

This saves time and avoids unnecessary repeated tests.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
A simple period calendar can be very useful. Please note dates, flow pattern, pain, weight changes, stress, and any medicines you are taking.

Dr. Dimple Doshi provides cause-based, ethical and personalised treatment for missed periods, hormonal imbalance and fertility concerns.

At Vardaan Hospital, Goregaon West, you receive:

  • careful history-taking
  • pregnancy exclusion
  • hormone evaluation
  • PCOS assessment
  • thyroid and prolactin testing guidance
  • ultrasound-based evaluation
  • primary amenorrhea assessment
  • Müllerian anomaly suspicion and guidance
  • fertility counselling
  • endometrial safety planning
  • lifestyle and nutrition direction
  • long-term follow-up

Dr. Dimple Doshi brings:

  • 25+ years of gynecology experience
  • 25,000+ gynecological and obstetric surgeries
  • ethical patient counselling
  • practical treatment planning
  • warm, women-focused care
  • expertise in menstrual disorders, fertility concerns and laparoscopic gynecology

Vardaan Hospital offers accessible gynecology care in Goregaon West for missed periods, hormonal imbalance, PCOS and menstrual disorders.

Patients choose Vardaan Hospital for:

  • convenient Goregaon West location
  • senior gynecologist consultation
  • ultrasound-based evaluation
  • menstrual disorder care
  • fertility counselling
  • pregnancy-related assessment
  • adolescent and reproductive-age care
  • menopause and POI guidance
  • continuity of follow-up

Vardaan Hospital is easily accessible for women from Goregaon West, Malad, Jogeshwari, Andheri, Kandivali, and nearby Mumbai suburbs.

Amenorrhea treatment cost depends on consultation, hormone tests, ultrasound, medicines and whether fertility or structural evaluation is needed.

Cost may vary based on:

  • consultation
  • pregnancy test
  • hormone profile
  • thyroid and prolactin tests
  • ultrasound
  • PCOS evaluation
  • AMH or ovarian reserve testing
  • MRI pelvis if Müllerian abnormality is suspected
  • medicines
  • follow-up visits
  • fertility-related treatment

Amenorrhea is a symptom, not a diagnosis; the real treatment depends on finding the exact hormonal, ovarian, uterine or structural cause.

The most important points are:

  • Pregnancy must be ruled out first in secondary amenorrhea.
  • No periods by age 15 needs evaluation.
  • Normal breast development with no periods may suggest Müllerian abnormality or outflow obstruction.
  • PCOS is a common cause of irregular or absent periods.
  • Stress, under-eating and excessive exercise can stop periods.
  • Thyroid and prolactin problems are treatable causes.
  • POI needs early hormone and fertility counselling.
  • Amenorrhea can affect fertility, bone health and endometrial safety.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
Do not ignore absent periods, and do not panic either. Once we find the cause, many types of amenorrhea can be managed safely.

Q1. What is amenorrhea?

Ans. Amenorrhea means absence of menstrual periods during reproductive age.

It may be primary, where periods never started, or secondary, where periods started earlier and then stopped.

Q2. When should I see a doctor for missed periods?

Ans. You should consult if periods stop for 3 months, if pregnancy test is negative, or if periods have not started by age 15.

You should also consult earlier if you have pain, discharge, nipple discharge, headache, facial hair, acne or fertility concern.

Q3. What is primary amenorrhea?

Ans. Primary amenorrhea means periods have not started by age 15 or within about 3 years after breast development.

Causes may include hormonal delay, Turner syndrome, Müllerian agenesis, MRKH syndrome, imperforate hymen or other structural causes.

Q4. Can Müllerian abnormalities cause no periods?

Ans. Yes. Müllerian abnormalities can cause primary amenorrhea when the uterus, cervix or upper vagina does not develop normally.

The girl may have normal breast development and normal ovarian hormones but no menstrual bleeding.

Q5. What is MRKH syndrome?

Ans. MRKH syndrome is a congenital condition where the uterus and upper vagina may be absent or underdeveloped, while ovaries usually function normally.

It is often diagnosed when a girl does not start periods despite normal puberty.

Q6. What does monthly pain with no periods mean?

Ans. Monthly pelvic pain with no bleeding may suggest obstructed menstrual flow and needs timely gynecological evaluation.

Possible causes include imperforate hymen, transverse vaginal septum or cervical obstruction.

Q7. What is the most common cause of secondary amenorrhea?

Ans. Pregnancy is the most common cause and should be ruled out first.

Other common causes include PCOS, thyroid disease, high prolactin, stress, weight loss and ovarian insufficiency.

Q8. Can PCOS cause no periods?

Ans. Yes. PCOS commonly causes delayed, irregular or absent periods due to irregular ovulation.

Treatment depends on whether the patient wants cycle regulation, fertility, acne control, weight management or endometrial protection.

Q9. Can stress stop periods?

Ans. Yes. Severe stress, under-eating, sudden weight loss and excessive exercise can suppress ovulation and stop periods.

This is called functional hypothalamic amenorrhea.

Q10. Can amenorrhea affect fertility?

Ans. Yes. Amenorrhea can affect fertility because ovulation may be absent, irregular or the reproductive tract may have a structural issue.

Many causes are treatable if diagnosed early.

Q11. Which hormone tests are done for amenorrhea?

Ans. Common tests include beta-hCG, TSH, prolactin, FSH, LH, estradiol and sometimes AMH or androgen profile.

Pelvic ultrasound is also commonly advised.

Q12. Can periods return naturally after amenorrhea?

Ans. Yes, periods may return naturally if the cause is temporary stress, weight change, breastfeeding or post-pill adjustment.

But persistent amenorrhea needs evaluation.

Conclusion

Amenorrhea means absence of periods, but the reason can vary widely — pregnancy, PCOS, thyroid disease, high prolactin, stress, weight loss, premature ovarian insufficiency, uterine scarring, Müllerian abnormalities or outflow tract obstruction.

In my clinical experience, the safest approach is to identify the exact cause before starting treatment. This is especially important in primary amenorrhea, where normal breast development with no periods may suggest Müllerian agenesis, MRKH syndrome, imperforate hymen, transverse vaginal septum or another structural condition.

At Vardaan Hospital, Goregaon West, Mumbai, Dr. Dimple Doshi provides cause-based evaluation, hormone testing guidance, ultrasound assessment, PCOS care, fertility counselling, Müllerian anomaly guidance, and compassionate menstrual health care.

No periods by age 15? No periods for 3 months? Trying to conceive with irregular cycles?
Get a clear diagnosis before self-medicating.
Book your amenorrhea consultation with Dr. Dimple Doshi at Vardaan Hospital, Goregaon West, Mumbai.

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