What happens to hormones during PMS?

Premenstrual syndrome (PMS) is usually due to hormone fluctuations just before menstruation. More specifically, the excess of estrogen during the luteal phase is often blamed for the various symptoms that many women receive during PMS. Thus, when estrogen does not decrease in response to growing progesterone levels, symptoms such as breast tenderness and mood fluctuations may result. Although different drugs are available to treat symptoms of PMS, there is no medicine to balance hormones, which often means premenstrual syndrome cannot be prevented.

What happens to hormones during PMS is often easier to understand when different phases in the cycle are explained. The first day of the period begins with the follicular phase, during which the hormone estrogen is dominant. It ends after about two weeks, culminating in ovulation, which is usually when the egg is released from the ovary. Once the ovulation passes, the luteal phase, which is usually dominated by progesterone begins. In women with particularly extreme symptoms of premenstrual syndrome, estrogen is one of the predominantH hormones during PMS, even at a time when it is to decrease to create space for progesterone.

Thus,

hormone imbalances during PMS are often fault for various symptoms that many women regularly receive. One of the most common symptoms of premenstrual syndrome includes mood swings, causing many women to feel depressed or irritated for no special reason. Many women also feel exhausted, but may have trouble sleeping. Of course, there are also some physical changes, such as bloating, acne and larger breasts that feel sore. The time during which women experience such symptoms depends largely on how long the hormone imbalance lasts during PMS, which means that some women must last longer than a week before menstruation, while others can only notice them for a day or two.

There are medicines on the market to mitigate some of the most common symptoms but cannotCell to treat premenstrual syndrome. This is because there is no certain way to balance hormones during PMS. In addition, it should be noted that the symptoms tend to deteriorate over time, which means that young women who do not experience them can begin to see how they age. The good news is that the only way to say that hormones are not balanced is through symptoms of PMS, and therefore most women are satisfied with symptoms.

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