In women younger than 40 years of age, the absence of any leucorrhea for a long time, as well as the disruption of the menstrual cycle or even amenorrhea, are often considered to be caused by abnormal ovarian endocrine function. In older women, the absence of leukorrhea is a normal physiological manifestation.
For older women, because they have already gone through menopause, their ovarian function has already declined, so they do not continue to secrete estrogen and progesterone, resulting in low levels of hormones in the body, and when there is no hormonal stimulation, there is no obvious discharge of leucorrhea, so older women tend to have vaginal dryness. However, because they are older women, this condition is actually a physiological phenomenon and therefore does not require special treatment. However, for women younger than 40 years old, if there is no leucorrhea for a long period of time, it is often considered that the ovarian function is in early decline, resulting in the inability to secrete estrogen and progesterone stimulation, causing the cervical cells and vaginal wall cells to shed, which is why there is no leucorrhea.
Only after the ovarian function is restored will women have normal leukorrhea.