Author: Dr. Tabassum Nafsi, MD FCCP
You go to your doctor with a list: weight gain you can’t explain, sleep that won’t come, a brain that feels wrapped in fog, a temper shorter than it’s ever been, and a libido that has seemingly disappeared overnight. You’re exhausted in a way that sleep doesn’t fix. Your cycles are unpredictable: sometimes heavy, sometimes non-existent. Your body simply doesn’t feel like yours anymore.
Your doctor runs some basic labs, finds nothing “alarming” on the standard printout, and looks at you with a sympathetic but dismissive smile. They tell you it’s just stress. Or perhaps it’s anxiety. Or depression. Or: and this is the one that really stings: that it’s “just a normal part of getting older.”
You leave the office with a prescription for an antidepressant, or maybe nothing at all, and the distinct, hollow feeling that you weren’t actually heard.
If this sounds familiar, you are not alone. And more importantly, you are not imagining it.
What you are experiencing is perimenopause: the 4 to 10-year hormonal transition preceding menopause: and it is one of the most under-recognized and undertreated conditions in women’s medicine today. At Rockford Pulmonary Clinic, I see women every day who have had their perimenopause symptoms dismissed in Rockford, IL, and across the state. My goal is to explain what is actually happening in your body, why the medical system is failing you, and what real, evidence-based care looks like.
What Perimenopause Actually Is
Perimenopause is not a single “event.” It is a prolonged, complex hormonal transition that typically begins in a woman’s early-to-mid 40s: though for many, it can start as early as the late 30s. It continues until you reach menopause, which is clinically defined as 12 consecutive months without a menstrual period.
During this transition, your ovarian function doesn’t just “stop.” It becomes irregular and erratic. Think of it less like a slow sunset and more like a rollercoaster. Estrogen levels don’t simply decline in a straight line; they fluctuate dramatically. You might have surges of estrogen that are higher than anything you experienced in your 20s, followed by sudden, jarring crashes.
Meanwhile, progesterone: the “calming” hormone: usually begins a more consistent decline earlier in the process. Testosterone, which is often completely ignored in women’s healthcare, also begins to drop. This triple-threat of hormone changes in perimenopause contributes to the fatigue, low libido, and cognitive “fuzziness” that many women describe.
These are not subtle shifts. They are significant, measurable, physiologic changes that affect virtually every organ system in the body: including the brain, cardiovascular system, metabolic health, and even your respiratory drive.

Why Physicians Frequently Miss the Mark
It is a frustrating reality: despite affecting 100% of women who reach midlife, perimenopause receives remarkably little attention in standard medical training. Studies show that the majority of OBGYNs and primary care physicians receive fewer than four hours of dedicated menopause education during their entire residency.
When a physician isn’t trained to see the “big picture” of hormonal health, they fall into a predictable pattern of misdiagnosis:
- Treating the Symptom, Not the Cause: Mood instability, irritability, and “new” anxiety are direct neurologic consequences of estrogen and progesterone fluctuation. Prescribing an SSRI (antidepressant) without addressing the hormonal root cause is like putting a band-aid on a broken leg. It might numb the pain, but the bone is still broken.
- The “Normal Labs” Trap: This is the biggest hurdle for women’s midlife health in Rockford. Standard hormone panels often look “normal” because hormones fluctuate day-to-day. A single blood draw is just a snapshot in time. If we catch you on a “high” day, the labs say you’re fine, even if you spent the previous three nights awake with night sweats.
- Normalization of Suffering: Telling a woman her suffering is “normal aging” is clinically inaccurate. Chronic insomnia, debilitating brain fog, and painful joints are not “normal”: they are consequences of treatable hormonal shifts.
The Symptoms That Deserve Clinical Attention (Not Dismissal)
If you are experiencing the following, you deserve an evaluation by a perimenopause doctor in Rockford who understands the nuances of midlife health:
1. Vasomotor Symptoms (The “Internal Furnace”)
Hot flashes and night sweats aren’t just “annoying.” They occur because estrogen fluctuations disrupt your brain’s thermostat (the hypothalamus). Severe vasomotor symptoms are actually associated with increased cardiovascular risk. We need to take them seriously.
2. Sleep Disruption and the Pulmonary Connection
As a triple-board-certified physician in Pulmonary, Sleep, and Internal Medicine, this is where I see the most overlap. Progesterone has a direct effect on your respiratory drive and sleep architecture. When it drops, women often experience fragmented sleep or develop sleep-disordered breathing for the first time. Many of my patients are shocked to find that their “new” snoring or daytime exhaustion is linked to their hormones.
3. Cognitive Changes (“Brain Fog”)
Estrogen receptors are located throughout the brain, especially in areas responsible for memory and executive function. When estrogen fluctuates, you might struggle with word recall or feel like your brain is “buffering.” This is a treatable hormonal phenomenon, not early-onset dementia.
4. Mood Instability and Anxiety
Progesterone acts as a natural anti-anxiety agent in the brain. As it declines, many women feel a sense of “impending dread” or heightened irritability. Understanding this as a chemical shift can be incredibly empowering.
5. Musculoskeletal and Urogenital Changes
Estrogen is anti-inflammatory and helps maintain collagen. Its decline leads to joint pain, muscle stiffness, and urogenital issues like vaginal dryness or recurrent UTIs. These symptoms are progressive: they usually won’t get better on their own without intervention.
What Evidence-Based Perimenopause Care Looks Like
At Rockford Pulmonary Clinic, we don’t believe in “one-size-fits-all” medicine. Real perimenopause treatment in Illinois should be as unique as your own biology. Here is how we approach it:
Comprehensive Laboratory Evaluation
We don’t just look at one number. A proper evaluation includes a full hormone panel (estradiol, progesterone, testosterone, and FSH), but it also looks at the “supporting cast.” We check your thyroid function, vitamin levels (like B12 and D), and metabolic markers like fasting insulin and A1c. Why? Because perimenopause can change how your body processes sugar and carries weight.
Personalized Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
The old fears surrounding HRT from decades ago have been largely debunked by modern science for the majority of women. We focus on Bioidentical Hormone Replacement Therapy, which uses hormones that are molecularly identical to the ones your body naturally produces. Whether it’s a patch, a cream, or an oral micronized progesterone, the goal is to stabilize the “rollercoaster” and restore your quality of life.
The Metabolic & Respiratory Connection
Because I am board-certified in Pulmonary and Sleep medicine, I look at your health through a unique lens. We address how your hormone changes might be impacting your breathing at night or your metabolic rate. True wellness isn’t just about hormones; it’s about ensuring your heart, lungs, and metabolism are all working in harmony.
The Direct-Pay Advantage: Why It Matters
One of the reasons women feel dismissed in traditional clinics is the “15-minute timer.” In an insurance-based system, doctors are forced to see 30 patients a day just to keep the lights on. You can’t explain a decade of hormonal changes in 15 minutes.
Rockford Pulmonary Clinic is a Direct-Pay practice. This means:
- No Insurance Red Tape: We don’t need permission from an insurance adjuster to order the labs you need.
- Time to Listen: Our consultations are long (often 45-60 minutes). I want to hear your whole story, from your sleep patterns to your stress levels.
- Wholesale Pricing: We offer transparent, upfront pricing. Our patients often save significantly on lab work because we pass our wholesale costs directly to you.
- No Drama, Just Care: You get a direct relationship with me, your doctor.
A Personal Note from Dr. Nafsi
“My mission is simple: I want women in our community to breathe easier, literally and figuratively. You shouldn’t have to fight your doctor just to be heard. At RPC, we combine high-level clinical expertise with the time and compassion that midlife health requires. You aren’t ‘just stressed’: you are going through a physiological shift that deserves modern, evidence-based support.”
: Dr. Tabassum Nafsi, MD FCCP
Take Charge of Your Health in Rockford
If you are tired of being told you’re “just getting older,” it is time for a different approach. You deserve a partner in your health who understands the intricate dance between your hormones, your lungs, and your brain.
Whether you are struggling with sleep apnea that started with perimenopause, or you are looking for a comprehensive women’s midlife health specialist in Rockford, we are here to support you. We see everyone, regardless of insurance status, providing a warm and welcoming environment where you are the priority.
Ready to stop wondering and start feeling like yourself again?
Rockford Pulmonary Clinic PLLC
6078 Palo Verde Dr, Rockford IL 61107
Phone: (815) 566 7781
Contact Us to Schedule Your Consultation
Don’t let your symptoms be dismissed for another day. Let’s get to the root of what’s happening in your body so you can finally breathe easier.