It is not uncommon for people to come to the clinic saying they’ve had no period for two months since starting a diet. Conversely, it’s also common for the cycle to become irregular as weight suddenly increases. The two situations seem opposite, but they are in fact things happening at both ends of the same circuit. When our body decides whether to turn reproductive function on or off, it constantly asks the question “is there enough energy right now,” and reads the answer from body fat and nutritional status. In this article, among the various causes of amenorrhea, I’ll focus especially on the connection with weight and look at the mechanism of why rapid weight change stops ovulation.
Menstruation is a switch the hypothalamus turns on and off
For menstruation to return regularly, the axis running from the hypothalamus to the pituitary to the ovaries must work without a gap. This pathway, commonly called the HPO axis, is a kind of command system in which gonadotropin-releasing hormone is secreted from the hypothalamus, and this stimulates the pituitary to awaken the ovaries. In the clinic, behind the single sentence “my period is late” hides a signal that some stage of this axis has been shaken.
Amenorrhea is broadly divided into two branches. The case of never having had menarche is called primary amenorrhea, and the case where a person who originally had periods stops is called secondary amenorrhea. Amenorrhea related to dieting, weight change, stress, and excessive exercise mostly falls under secondary. That is, it is a situation where “a switch that was running well turned off at some point,” and what pulled the trigger is often a change in energy balance.
The hypothalamus treats reproduction as “a function to turn on only when there is room for survival.” When the body judges it’s a crisis, it first puts off energy-intensive processes like pregnancy and childbirth.
Body fat is not simply flesh but tissue that makes hormones
Body fat is not only a storehouse that stores energy but is itself an endocrine organ that secretes hormones. Fat cells make a hormone called leptin and send the information “there is this much energy stored in the body right now” to the brain. The hypothalamus reads this leptin signal and adjusts the intensity of gonadotropin-releasing hormone secretion. The Endocrine Society’s clinical guideline on functional hypothalamic amenorrhea also organizes that energy signals including leptin are involved in the activity of this axis.
When body fat falls below a certain level, the leptin concentration lowers, and the hypothalamus interprets this as “energy deficiency” and reduces the ovulation signal. Already in the 1970s, Frisch and McArthur reported the observation that a certain proportion of body fat or more is needed for menstruation to begin and be maintained (Frisch & McArthur, 1974). Today, this is explained more precisely with the concept of the balance of intake and expenditure—that is, energy availability—rather than the absolute amount of body fat.
When eating too little or moving too much: energy-deficiency-type amenorrhea
Extreme dietary restriction and excessive exercise are common causes of amenorrhea. The key is, rather than weight itself, how much “leftover energy” there is—the calories consumed minus the calories burned through exercise. This pattern is often observed in athletes or those on excessive diets.
When energy falls below a certain level, the hypothalamus reduces the pulsatile secretion of gonadotropin-releasing hormone. When a hormone test is done at this time, a so-called hypogonadotropic hypogonadism pattern, in which gonadotropins come out low, is reported. In exercise-related studies, there is a report that the risk of menstrual abnormality rises around a boundary of about 30 kcal per kg of lean body mass per day, but recently there is also a view that this figure is hard to apply identically to everyone.
How such an energy-deficiency state affects not only menstruation but bone health and the whole body is explained in sports medicine grouped under the female athlete triad or relative energy deficiency in sport (International Olympic Committee consensus statement, 2014). The following table organizes the signals frequently accompanying energy-deficiency-type amenorrhea.
| Area | Frequently appearing change |
|---|---|
| Menstruation | Cycle delay, oligomenorrhea, amenorrhea |
| Hormones | Estrogen decline, gonadotropin decrease |
| Skeleton | Bone density decrease, osteopenia·osteoporosis risk |
| Whole body | Cold sensitivity, chronic fatigue, decreased concentration |
In cases like anorexia nervosa, where there is a disorder in eating itself, treatment of the underlying disease comes before amenorrhea. Fortunately, it is reported that when weight and nutrition recover, the menstrual cycle mostly returns as before. If you have the concern of an irregular menstrual cycle due to rapid weight change, I recommend discerning the cause through care rather than self-judgment.
A problem when it increases too much, too: obesity and amenorrhea
Conversely, menstruation is shaken when weight increases excessively as well. This is because obesity is not simply a state of having gained weight but a metabolic change that wholly alters the hormonal environment. Obesity is reported to be associated with menstrual disorders, ovulatory disorders, and infertility.
When fat tissue increases, the enzyme aromatase within it becomes active, increasing the amount of male-hormone class converted to estrogen. At the same time, as sex hormone-binding globulin decreases, active sex hormones increase, and hyperinsulinemia due to insulin resistance spurs androgen secretion by the ovaries and adrenal glands. When a flow is created in which androgen excess, hyperinsulinemia, and sex hormone-binding globulin decrease reinforce one another, ovulation becomes difficult, and as a result the cycle lengthens or menstruation stops.
This loop is especially distinct in polycystic ovary syndrome. When obesity is added to a person with polycystic ovary syndrome, it can be a factor that worsens symptoms such as insulin resistance and amenorrhea, so in care we primarily recommend weight management. If you’re curious about the topic, reading together an article organizing the whole picture of polycystic ovary syndrome and why irregular periods should not be neglected helps.
If menstrual change worries you, get a remote consultationEven the same amenorrhea can have opposite causes
The energy-deficiency type and the obesity type both lead to amenorrhea, but what happens inside the body is opposite, like a mirror. So applying advice suited to one side directly to the other can, far from helping, be harmful. Below I’ve simply compared the difference between the two types.
| Category | Energy-deficiency type | Obesity-related type |
|---|---|---|
| Common background | Excessive dieting, excessive exercise, eating disorder | Weight gain, insulin resistance, polycystic ovary syndrome |
| Estrogen | Generally low | Can be relatively high, converted in fat tissue |
| Primary approach | Nutrition·weight recovery, treatment of accompanying disease | Lifestyle correction and weight management |
In the clinic, even for the same complaint of “I have no period,” the direction splits greatly just from hearing the meal record, amount of exercise, and trend of weight change. So rather than concluding amenorrhea by self-diagnosis, the process of confirming which circuit has been shaken through hormone tests and examination is important. If you’re curious about the big framework of diagnosis, you can also refer to an article organizing what tests are needed when you don’t have a period.
Avoiding rapid weight change itself is the key
In the end, what matters for menstrual health is not a “thin body” or “a specific number,” but maintaining an energy balance that the body can feel is stable. It would be good to remember that, beyond keeping an appropriate weight, rapid change itself—whether increasing or decreasing—burdens the cycle.
Healthy meals and regular exercise certainly help. However, when anything leans to an extreme, the body takes it as a crisis and turns off reproductive function first. If your period stopped during a diet, rather than “let’s wait and see until I lose more weight,” it is safer to take it as a warning the body is sending. Conversely, if the cycle became irregular as weight increased, it is necessary to examine whether insulin resistance or polycystic ovary syndrome is hidden in the background.
If you have had no period for two to three months or more, or the cycle is clearly shaken along with weight change, please don’t delay care. If you consult an obstetrics-gynecology specialist about menstrual change and hormones, we can organize together a direction that fits your current physical condition.
Written by: Lee Dong-hee, Director · Obstetrics and Gynecology Specialist · View medical staff profile
First published March 21, 2024 · Last reviewed May 30, 2026
References: Endocrine Society, Functional Hypothalamic Amenorrhea Clinical Practice Guideline (2017), Frisch & McArthur (1974), IOC Consensus Statement on Relative Energy Deficiency in Sport (2014), Obesity and Menstrual Disorders, Best Practice & Research Clinical Obstetrics & Gynaecology (2015)
This article is intended to provide general health information and does not replace individual diagnosis or treatment. If you have symptoms, please consult through a medical visit.