Women are just finding out they lose part of their
s during menopause
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Seems that postmenopausal women have kept tight-lipped about this one. On social media this week, thousands of women have been shocked to learn that part of the vulva can actually disappear during “the change.”
“These labia minora — when you’re a baby you don’t have them, you grow them in puberty, and you lose them in menopause,” Dr. Rachel Rubin, a board-certified urologist and sexual medicine expert, recently said in a TikTok.
That was certainly news to many of the video’s 1.2 million viewers, most of whom were women who had no idea that’s what was in store for their own bodies.
“You LOSE them?! I’m sorry… what?! I’m 41… how much time do I have left with my lips?” one stunned woman commented.
“Science education has failed us bc WHAT DO YOU MEAN WE LOSE THEM???” demanded another horrified viewer.
Many had questions about the mechanics, with one asking, “Do they just fall off? Do we get money for them like baby teeth?”
Science doesn’t have many answers, either: “There’s a lack of research on this part of the body,” Rubin said. “Literally all the research we have is from when people want to cut off their labia to look more like porn stars.”
Menopause — the stage when a woman’s menstrual periods stop permanently and pregnancy is no longer possible — typically begins between the ages of 45 and 55. Common symptoms include hot flashes, night sweats, sleep disturbances and pain during sex.

There are some changes many women don’t expect, including the shrinking of the labia minora, or the “inner lips” of the vulva. These sensitive folds play a vital role in protecting the

In youth, the labia minora are typically very small, developing during puberty due to hormonal changes. As women age, they typically decrease in size, and in some cases, can disappear entirely, according to Dr. Stephanie Finley, an OB-GYN based in Florida.
The labia minora aren’t the only part of the vulva that changes during menopause.

Finley points out that women can also experience loss of pubic hair, a shrinking of the mons pubis (the fatty mound above the pubic bones) and a reduction in the size of the labia majora — or the outer lips — along with the clitoris and its hood.
Rubin is actively investigating the issue, aiming to uncover whether estrogen or testosterone are responsible for these changes, if every woman experiences them the same way, and whether the labia minora can ever grow back.