Healthy weight but missing periods

My bmi is on the higher end of the scale. I am 5' 1 and weigh 120. I wear a size 4-6 in pants, and small in shirts. My dress size is small also. Sometimes medium. I have a 24.5" waist and 32.5" hips. I have not gotten my period in 2 months. I exercise 2-3 hours a day. Everyone says that I look so thin. I look thinner than my weight says that I am. So, I'm not sure why I'm missing periods if I'm "healthy". I eat 1200-1600 calories a day. I don't know the exact amount I burn off during the 2-3 hours of exercise but I'm sure it's not too much is the elliptical says 500 calories at the most. They say missing periods is due to too low of a body fat percentage, stress, or being pregnant. Well I am absolutely not pregnant. Is it possible to being thinner than the scale or bmi says? Can someone have different body compositions? Are these numbers always accurate with someone's actual size? My mom (a nurse) thinks I am not eating enough for the amount of exercise I do and that I could stand to gain a few pounds. I don't want my body to be malnourished but I want to lose even more weight because the scale says I'm on the higher end of healthy. It bothers me but I don't know if I'm fine the way I am or really do need to lose more weight. Any answers are appreciated
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Replies

  • AmykinsCatfood
    AmykinsCatfood Posts: 599 Member
    Muscle weighs more than fat so if you work out a lot, there is a distinct possibility of you having a higher weight due to muscle. One thing you can do is get your body fat percent professionally tested to determine how much is muscle and how much is fat. If you opened your diary people could give suggestions as to diet changes, but it sounds to me like you may want to get your BF% tested and talk to a certified nutritionist/dietitian to figure out what the ideal # of calories is right for you.
  • Your body fat may be too low; I can't recall the source, but a UK doctor stated that a BF% of 13 or lower can lead to missing periods. Same with too little iron or overexercising.

    Start tracking your iron and make sure you get enough, cut back on exercising, and eat back your calories.

    Good luck!
  • BlueBombers
    BlueBombers Posts: 4,064 Member
    You exercise 2-3 hours a day and only eat between 1200-1600 calories per day....yeah I would say you aren't eating enough (I'm guessing you are not eating back any of our exercise calories either).
  • thesophierose
    thesophierose Posts: 754 Member
    Start taking a multivitamin with iron :) cut back on so much excessive workouts, you are tiny... you don't need to do that much everyday. Eat more. And be patient.
  • littleburgy
    littleburgy Posts: 570 Member
    I had a similar situation as far as being at a normal weight but ceasing to menstruate. I am 5'8" and when I was in college I lost weight, I thought at 130 I was normal but had always been pretty active and athletic, muchos muscles. I lost my periods and got the body fat tested, the underwater kind. My body fat was VERY low. Which I thought a little surprising at 130 but a lot of people did tell me I had gone from looking "great" to "too thin" and was extremely rigid about my diet and exercise regimen.

    Had to see a nutritionist, gyno, and gain some weight back to get the menses back.

    So, yes, the scale can be deceptive!
  • feebz36
    feebz36 Posts: 32 Member
    If you have not had a period for 2 months you should see your doctor. There are many reasons for a woman stop menstruating other than weight related issues. You are obviously worried about your weight as you have gone on to a web forum for reassurance, perhaps your doctor can also help you with that (be it to reassure or to make suggestions). I know I am just another faceless voice on the web, but I am medically trained and so suggest seeking proper medical advice is a wise idea :)
  • chatogal
    chatogal Posts: 436 Member
    could just be normal hormonal ups and downs. By all means visit a doctor....but dont jump to the worst scenario...could just be a normal fluctuation :-)
  • acpgee
    acpgee Posts: 7,946 Member
    Please check with your doctor. Amenorrhea (cessation of periods due to body fat being too low to support a pregnancy) has serious implications for bone density and hormone levels. I got this once while training hard for a full marathon when I was younger.
  • my period stopped for about 4 months, my weightloss was becoming rapid. I had to stop exercising and started taking dong quai, vitamin d, multi vit, flaxseed caps, chasteberry, macca root. I also started using almond milk in my protein shakes and eating almonds as a snack. my period came back within 5 days of starting the above. my hormones were so out from the heavy exercising and low calories, I got down to 105.6lbs ( 5.1 ) I am now 113.7lbs. I still get told I look skinny but I know im not. try giving the workouts a rest and take up walking instead, you don't have to keep working at such a high level now.
  • shapefitter
    shapefitter Posts: 900 Member
    Please, make an appointment to see your health practisioner.
  • teamAmelia
    teamAmelia Posts: 1,247 Member
    I'd see a doctor.
  • Start taking a multivitamin with iron :) cut back on so much excessive workouts, you are tiny... you don't need to do that much everyday. Eat more. And be patient.

    This is a good idea. Multivitamin is a good start.
  • MelissaPhippsFeagins
    MelissaPhippsFeagins Posts: 8,063 Member
    Go see your doctor. ASAP. He/she can test your body fat and check to see if there might be something else up. While I suspect your BF% is too low, I have also seen otherwise healthy women miss uterine or ovarian cancer because they just missed a couple of periods. That's probably the scariest thing that could be causing missed periods and I hope I just caused you to go find out that isn't it.

    For the record, Tom Brady is severely obese according to the BMI and we all know he is isn't fat. The same for LeBron James (whom I think actually comes out to morbidly obese) and Serena Williams. I have two friends who are marathoners who are also 'obese'. I think that's funny. While it's decent measure of the general population, it's not accurate for everyone.
  • lisalsd1
    lisalsd1 Posts: 1,519 Member
    From your stats, I'm about the same size as you. I have 2 kids, and when I started getting my period after baby #2, it was very irregular. One problem I was able to pin down through bloodwork is that my Vitamin D level was VERY low. I had to supplement with a high dose script of D2 for years. That didn't work very well to increase my level or regulate my period. I started a high dose supplement of D3 (under dr supervision). After almost a year, my level increased to an acceptable level, and my period became perfectly regular for the first time in my life.

    Have a dr check your Vit D level, and if you need to supplement, try D3 instead of D2.
  • UpEarly
    UpEarly Posts: 2,555 Member
    Go see your doctor. You don't sound so thin that your cycle would cease, and there are MANY things that cause irregular periods that have nothing to do with weight.
  • kimosabe1
    kimosabe1 Posts: 2,467 Member
    Your body fat may be too low; I can't recall the source, but a UK doctor stated that a BF% of 13 or lower can lead to missing periods. Same with too little iron or overexercising.

    Start tracking your iron and make sure you get enough, cut back on exercising, and eat back your calories.

    Good luck!
  • Im 5'3 and my wight went at low as 104. I didn't have my period for over a year. I went to my doctor and all that and gained enough to hit about 129lbs which felt like to much wight for me. Im 117 now and looking to get to 113. My periods returned back to normal at about 110lbs. Although at 104 my BMI was on the low end of normal wight it was still considered 'normal' or 'healthy'. Honestly i think it kind of depends on the person. Im sure there are other people who are 5'3 and 104lbs and completely healthy with regular periods, that wight was simply to low for me personally.
  • I am 5ft 0, currently weigh 98 lbs with am aprox BMI of 19. I didn't have a period for about a year, then after two rounds of progesterone and another round of estrogen+progesterone I finally got one, but haven't gotten another one yet. I am struggling to figure out what I did wrong assuming I was/am still at a healthy body weight but on the low end.
  • CoffeeNBooze
    CoffeeNBooze Posts: 966 Member
    I'd love to give you a dead on answer but the best thing to do is see a doctor to really access where you're at.
  • dwh77tx
    dwh77tx Posts: 513 Member
    this happened to me before and is happening to me now. It's not the weight necessary but something I read is that exercising for that long interferes with hormones and therefore you aren't ovulating. I saw my dr. the last time this happened. Recommendation- cut back your exercise to no more than an hour a day, and take 2 active rest days. I bet it will come back. I'm cutting back to 4 times a week instead of 6 and waiting patiently for Aunt Flow.
  • ERMOT
    ERMOT Posts: 8 Member
    If your mom is a nurse, I would start with her suggestions first. Mom is usually right. Mine put me onto MFP to begin with. :wink:

    But I would echo the others who advised you add more calories and cut back some on the exercise. I'm 5'2", 125 lbs with a right down the middle small/medium frame. BMI is a tricky devil that will drive you mad. Don't let that one number fool you into thinking you need to lose more. I was eating 1700 calories and chasing 2 kids and running at home--and still losing when I was trying to maintain. And my mom and sisters all started telling me to eat more--my thinness was freaking them out. So, now I'm eating 1900 and eat back my exercise calories more often. I feel better for it. Always feel like you can tweak the numbers to fit you. That's the beauty of this.

    :smile:
  • geekyjock76
    geekyjock76 Posts: 2,720 Member
    With that much exercise in relation to your food intake, your energy availability is likely low enough to cause disruption in LH pulsatility and ovarian function. In other words, you are not netting enough calories chronically to have a period.

    Here is the study.
    Luteinizing hormone pulsatility is disrupted at a threshold of energy availability in regularly menstruating women.

    Abstract
    To investigate the dependence of LH pulsatility on energy availability (dietary energy intake minus exercise energy expenditure), we measured LH pulsatility after manipulating the energy availability of 29 regularly menstruating, habitually sedentary, young women of normal body composition for 5 d in the early follicular phase. Subjects expended 15 kcal/kg of lean body mass (LBM) per day in supervised exercise at 70% of aerobic capacity while consuming a clinical dietary product to set energy availability at 45 and either 10, 20, or 30 kcal/kg LBM.d in two randomized trials separated by at least 2 months. Blood was sampled daily during treatments and at 10-min intervals for the next 24 h. Samples were assayed for LH, FSH, estradiol (E2), glucose, beta-hydroxybutyrate, insulin, cortisol, GH, IGF-I, IGF-I binding protein (IGFBP)-1, IGFBP-3, leptin, and T3. LH pulsatility was unaffected by an energy availability of 30 kcal/kg LBM.d (P > 0.3), but below this threshold LH pulse frequency decreased, whereas LH pulse amplitude increased (all P < 0.04). This disruption was more extreme in women with short luteal phases (P < 0.01). These incremental effects most closely resembled the effects of energy availability on plasma glucose, beta-hydroxybutyrate, GH, and cortisol and contrasted with the dependencies displayed by the other metabolic hormones (simultaneously P < 0.05). These results demonstrate that LH pulsatility is disrupted only below a threshold of energy availability deep into negative energy balance and suggest priorities for future investigations into the mechanism that mediates the nonlinear dependence of LH pulsatility on energy availability.

    http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12519869
  • strflt
    strflt Posts: 29 Member
    BMI. Drop it.

    It sounds like you exercise extensively, so you should stop using the BMI scale. It's really meant only for the average person, who maybe (or not) works out a total of 3 hours a *week*. Your muscle tone is going to blow that scale out of the water because you have so much muscle and muscle weighs more than fat.

    Don't look at your BMI anymore. :/ You are way beyond the ranges that scale is designed to accommodate. Go see your doctor instead and ask what a healthy weight is for someone your size who exercises as much as you do.
  • Xtrobelights
    Xtrobelights Posts: 39 Member
    If you are very active you won't have regular periods. I know, I was like that ever since I started my period. I was so active and had a very low body fat percentage and was skinny so I almost never had a regular period. Doesn't mean anything is wrong it just means your body can't have a period every single month. I very much enjoyed it...lol. After I got on birth control it didn't matter how active I was, I always have the period...every month :( haha

    You should see a doctor. Chances are you're fine but you should get a diagnosis
  • startingtoday94
    startingtoday94 Posts: 21 Member
    I'd say it's because you're exercising so much and - like everyone else has said - you probably have quite a low body fat percentage.

    A few years ago when I was exercising a lot and restricting my calorie intake the same thing happened to me. I lost my period for 16 months.... i was a healthy weight and the doctor couldn't find anything wrong. As soon as I stopped exercising so much and gained back some weight (which I wasn't happy about considering I was a healthy weight to start with) my period came back.

    Best of luck :)
  • lb0030
    lb0030 Posts: 24
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  • Mitzigan94
    Mitzigan94 Posts: 393 Member
    multivitamin it is that u needed.

    :)
  • Hello, weight is an important symbol of reaction and measure the health of a person. Obesity and too thin is not conducive to health, it will not give people a sense of fitness. A lot of different body showed statistical material, reflecting normal weight ideal and simple indicators that can be used to represent the relationship between height and weight.
  • At my most active and lowest body fat (I think it was 10% and 9 stone at 5"11) I was still having periods. What does cause my periods to skip sometimes though is my polycystic ovaries. You might want to get it checked out to see if you have it, as it can cause fertility and weight problems and is quite common in the US and UK.
  • Sarahndipity30
    Sarahndipity30 Posts: 312 Member
    At my most active and lowest body fat (I think it was 10% and 9 stone at 5"11) I was still having periods. What does cause my periods to skip sometimes though is my polycystic ovaries. You might want to get it checked out to see if you have it, as it can cause fertility and weight problems and is quite common in the US and UK.

    This.^

    If you aren't pregnant, or feel there is no way you would be pregnant. I woul dbe checked for PCOS. It can cause irregular to non existant periods, hair loss or excessive hair growth in other areas of your body, weight gain, trouble losing weight, painful periods, infertility, ovarian cancer and in some much more.
    Please check with your doctor.