Low blood pressure during menopause is mainly due to endocrine disorders, wasting and heart diseases. 1. Endocrine disorders: Because women are prone to abnormal secretion of hormones such as estrogen and progesterone during menopause, it may cause autonomic nervous system dysfunction, affecting the contraction and diastole of blood vessels, and therefore low blood pressure symptoms may occur. 2. Body wasting: If women lack nutrition for a long time during menopause, it will lead to slow blood circulation and slow blood supply to distal capillaries, resulting in lower blood pressure. 3. Heart diseases, such as narrow pericarditis and heart failure, can lead to insufficient ejection of blood from the heart, causing a decrease in peripheral blood circulation and low blood pressure. If a woman has low blood pressure during menopause, she should go to the hospital immediately for examination, combine the actual situation, and take reasonable treatment under the guidance of the doctor, and do not blindly use medication, so as not to miss the opportunity of the disease.