Burning tongue

Burning tongue

Burning tongue and Menopause

Burning tongue can be a very irritating and painful symptom of menopause. Just like the name suggests, burning tongue occurs when an individual experiences a burning sensation on the tongue. Everyone has sipped a beverage such as coffee or tea that is too hot and burned her tongue. This is the sensation that those who suffer from burning tongue experience constantly.

Burning tongue affects women seven times as often as men. Women going through hormonal transitions, such as the time leading up to menopause, are at an even greater risk of developing the symptom, because hormonal imbalance is known to cause burning tongue.

 

About Burning Tongue

Also known as burning mouth syndrome, burning tongue has a self-explanatory name. It also goes by its medical names: glossodynia, glossopyrosis, oral galvanism, stomatodynia and stomatopyrosis. Burning tongue is accompanied by burning pain on the tongue, especially on the tip or back of the tongue, or other areas of the mouth.

Burning mouth pain is often absent during the night but progressively increases throughout the day and into the evening.

Following the onset, which is often instantaneous, burning tongue has been known to last for several years. There are typically no visible signs or lesions on the tongue or mouth in those who suffer from it.

 

Causes of Burning Tongue

There are several possible causes of burning tongue, but because it is most common in postmenopausal women, researchers believe the primary cause in women is hormonal imbalance, specifically low estrogen levels.

In fact, burning tongue affects up to 40% of menopausal women, with the onset typically occurring between three years prior to menopause and 12 years following menopause.

“Supertasters” are individuals with abnormally dense and abundant taste buds who have a heightened sense of taste. Supertasters are affected more dramatically by burning tongue than those with a normal amount of taste buds.

Estrogen is known to play a part in the makeup of the saliva, which researchers believe can cause burning tongue once estrogen levels decrease. But perhaps more prominently, estrogen affects the bitter taste buds located at the back of the tongue.

Without adequate levels of estrogen, some women begin to lose their bitter taste buds. These taste buds are surrounded by a basket-like collection of pain neurons that activate when the taste buds are damaged by lack of estrogen.

 

Other Causes of Burning Tongue

Although hormonal imbalance is the primary cause of burning tongue in women at the age of menopause and older, there are other causes of burning tongue as well. They are:

  • Diabetes
  • Oral candida (oral yeast)
  • Dry mouth (xerostomia)
  • Medications (diuretics, oral diabetic meds, some blood pressure meds)
  • Blood abnormalities (dyscrasias, anemia)
  • Nutritional deficiencies (especially vitamin B-12, niacin, iron, or folic acid)
  • Gastric acid reflux
  • Allergies (foods, toothpastes, mouthwashes, chewing gums)
  • Geographic tongue
  • Dental disease
  • Noxious oral habits (tongue biting, scalloped tongue)
  • Psychological causes (depression)
  • Chronic infections
  • Inflammatory disorders
  • Lingual nerve damage
  • Tobacco use
  • Oral cancer

If pain or soreness in your tongue, lips, gums or other areas of your mouth persists for several days, consult a doctor.
A doctor can search for the possible cause or causes to help guide treatment.

 

Treatment of Menopausal Symptoms:

  1. Lifestyle Changes
  2. The Manna Menopause Support Supplement, with 100% natural phyto-estrogens.

Manna Menopause Support is available at: