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Healthily: Menopause and hot flushes

28 Jul 2021 | Written by Heathily

Hot flushesAs part of our Wellness Wednesdays campaign, we’ll be sharing a blog every Wednesday from Healthily – our preferred health partner – to give you tips, advice and guidance on a wide variety of health conditions. This blog is a follow-up to our previous post on the menopause, this time we are focusing specifically on the hot flushes the menopause can cause – what triggers them and, importantly, how to cope with them.


Hot flushes are the most common symptom of the menopause but there are a range of medical treatments and self-help techniques to beat the heat.

Not all women experience hot flushes going through the menopause, but most do. 3 out of every 4 menopausal women have hot flushes. They’re characterised by a sudden feeling of heat which seems to come from nowhere and spreads through your body. They can include sweating, palpitations and a red flush (blushing), and vary in severity from woman to woman.

Some women only have occasional hot flushes which don’t really bother them at all, while others report 20 hot flushes a day that are uncomfortable, disruptive and embarrassing.

Hot flushes usually continue for several years after your last period. But they can carry on for many, many years – even into your 70s or 80s. It’s thought they are caused by hormone changes that affect the body’s temperature control.

Causes of hot flushes

Most women going through a natural menopause experience hot flushes. But there are other causes of hot flushes, including:

  • Breast cancer treatment – according to Cancer Research UK, 7 out of 10 women who’ve had breast cancer treatment have hot flushes, and they tend to be more severe and frequent than those of women going through a natural menopause. This is because chemotherapy and tamoxifen tablets reduce oestrogen levels.
  • Prostate cancer treatment – men having treatment for prostate cancer can also have hot flushes, sometimes for years. Hormone treatment causes hot flushes in men by lowering the amount of testosterone in their body.

What does a hot flush feel like?

Women often describe a hot flush as a creeping feeling of intense warmth that quickly spreads across your whole body and face ‘right up to your brow’ and which lasts for several minutes. Others say the warmth is similar to the sensation of being under a sun bed, feeling hot ‘like a furnace’ or as if someone had ‘opened a little trap door in my stomach and put a hot coal in’.

Hot flush triggers

Hot flushes can happen without warning throughout the day and night, but there are well-known triggers, including wearing woolly jumpers (especially polo necks), feeling stressed, drinking alcohol or coffee, or eating spicy foods.

How can hot flush be treated? 

Many women learn to live with menopause-related hot flushes, but if they’re really bothering you and interfering with your day-to-day life, talk to your doctor about treatments that may help.

The most effective is hormone replacement therapy (HRT) which usually completely gets rid of hot flushes. But other medicines have been shown to help, including vitamin E supplements, some antidepressants, and a drug called gabapentin, which is usually used to treat seizures.

Note that doctors recommend that you don’t take HRT if you’ve had a hormone dependent cancer such as breast or prostate cancer.

Self-help remedies for hot flushes

Try these everyday tips to ease the overheating:

  • cut out coffee, tea, and stop smoking
  • keep the room cool, use a fan – electric or handheld – if necessary
  • if you feel a flush coming on, spray your face with a cool water atomiser or use a cold gel pack
  • wear loose layers of light cotton or silk clothes so you can easily take some clothes off if you overheat
  • have layers of sheets on your bed rather than a duvet so you can remove them as you need to and keep your bedroom cool
  • cut down on alcohol
  • sip cold or iced drinks
  • have a lukewarm shower or bath instead of a hot one

Is a hot flush anything to worry about?

Hot flushes are generally a harmless symptom of the menopause. But very occasionally they may be a sign of a blood cancer or carcinoid (a type of neuroendocrine tumour).

See your doctor if, in addition to hot flushes, you’ve been unwell with, for example, fatigue, weakness, weight loss or diarrhoea.


You can read the full article in the Healthily Health Library where it was originally published.

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