Little is known about the burning sensation in the mouth, which is common in women during perimenopause. This strange phenomenon, sometimes accompanied by dryness or a change in taste, can be partially explained by a drop in estrogen levels. Like a subtle fire igniting in the mouth, this symptom is often wrongly overlooked.
The Famous Hot Flashes: The Body’s Well-Known Alarm
Characteristic symptoms are sudden waves of heat spreading from the torso to the face, often accompanied by sweating or chills. They occur both during the day and in the middle of the night, sometimes turning sleep into a real ordeal.
When your mood changes

Irritability, nervous fatigue, anxiety, and even moments of melancholy: menopause also turns your brain upside down. Declining estrogen levels disrupt the secretion of serotonin, the happiness hormone. The result: emotions become more unstable, sometimes unpredictable.
Restless Nights, Disturbed Rest
Difficulty falling asleep, frequent waking, constant fatigue… Night sweats and hormonal imbalances seriously disrupt sleep. This vicious cycle exhausts both body and mind.