When the menstrual cycle halts for three months, the body whispers through subtle signals—a racing pulse at night, sudden heat surging through the chest, or sleep fragmented by restless tossing. Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) interprets this as "excessive heart fire" disrupting the yin-yang balance, where yang energy overwhelms yin's cooling essence, leading to "internal heat accumulation." Modern medicine frames it through the lens of cardiovascular strain: prolonged amenorrhea often correlates with elevated cortisol levels, triggering oxidative stress that damages endothelial cells lining blood vessels. This dual-system imbalance manifests in shared symptoms—palpitations, insomnia, and metabolic slowdown—as the body struggles to maintain homeostasis.
The autonomic nervous system becomes a battleground in such cases. TCM's "营卫不和" (disharmony between defensive and nutritive qi) mirrors Western observations of sympathetic nervous system overactivation. Patients report feeling "wired but tired," their hands trembling slightly while energy levels crash midday. Blood tests may reveal estrogen dominance paired with progesterone deficiency, creating a hormonal environment that thickens uterine lining without triggering shedding. This stagnation fuels inflammation, increasing risks for both cardiovascular events and endometrial hyperplasia. To restore equilibrium, TCM recommends cooling herbs like chrysanthemum and raw rehmannia to nourish yin, while modern protocols emphasize magnesium supplementation to stabilize heart rhythm and melatonin to reset circadian cycles. The key lies in harmonizing fire and water elements—whether through acupressure at Pericardium 6 to calm heart fire or cognitive behavioral therapy to break stress-induced hormonal loops.

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