Nature keeps you well

Why PMDD Can Feel Like Withdrawal: The Hormone Mechanics

2 min · I går
episode Why PMDD Can Feel Like Withdrawal: The Hormone Mechanics cover

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This episode breaks down how the menstrual cycle’s follicular and luteal phases interact with progesterone and its metabolite allopregnanolone, and why some women with PMDD experience a paradoxical nervous-system destabilization instead of calm. It also explains how the late-luteal drop in estrogen impairs serotonin, why SSRIs are the current first-line treatment (and used at low, luteal-phase doses), and presents a herbal-medicine approach focused on supporting progesterone metabolism, modulating GABA, boosting serotonin pathways, reducing inflammation, and addressing HPA-axis dysregulation to build nervous-system resilience.

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Alle episoder

12 Episoder

episode Nourish to Calm: Practical Nutritional Steps to Reduce PMDD by 30–40% cover

Nourish to Calm: Practical Nutritional Steps to Reduce PMDD by 30–40%

This episode outlines practical nutritional and lifestyle foundations that can significantly reduce PMDD symptoms: nightly magnesium (300–400 mg, glycinate or bisglycinate), vitamin B6 as part of a B‑complex (~50 mg), 2 g combined EPA/DHA omega‑3s, and stabilizing blood sugar by eating protein with every meal and avoiding refined carbs in the luteal phase. Additional recommendations include trialing a luteal‑phase alcohol pause, prioritizing consistent sleep and morning light exposure, reducing evening blue light, and tracking your cycle and symptoms to gain agency and plan around predictable symptom windows. Together these measures often reduce symptoms by about 30–40% and make other treatments more effective.

I går3 min
episode PMDD: When to Seek Help — You Don’t Have to Suffer Alone cover

PMDD: When to Seek Help — You Don’t Have to Suffer Alone

If you’re experiencing suicidal thoughts in your luteal phase, please tell your GP or a trusted healthcare professional — PMDD-related suicidal ideation is recognized and treatable and you do not have to white-knuckle through it. If you’ve been struggling for more than three cycles with significant impairment to daily life, relationships, or work, seek support from your GP, a gynaecologist, or a PMDD specialist; in the UK ask your GP about referral options and resources such as IAPMD (IAPMD.org). PMDD is a real, neurologically based sensitivity to hormone fluctuations — not a character flaw — and it can be addressed. Herbal and conventional medicines are often used together: herbs like vitex, St John’s wort, valerian and ashwagandha alongside foundational nutrition, supplements and lifestyle work can be effective when tailored by a qualified practitioner. If you’d like one-to-one help, consultations are available in clinic in Lancashire and online across the UK; visit mariemalcahyhormonehealthspecialist.co.uk for details and a free hormone quiz. If this episode helped you, please share it with someone who needs to hear it.

I går2 min