If you’re a woman contending with the roller coaster that is ADHD, then you know that your monthly cycle only makes that all the more intense. It might even feel like you have bipolar disorder–during ovulation, you feel like you’re on top of the world, but as soon as PMS hits, it’s like your emotions take on a life of their own. You’re not imagining it – PMS really does make ADHD symptoms worse, and vice versa. Read on to discover some of the reasons what happens when PMS strikes with ADHD and what you can do to feel like you’re in better control of both your mind and your emotions.
The Dopamine-Estrogen-Progesterone Connection
One of the primary differences between a neurotypical brain and an ADHD one has to do with dopamine levels. More specifically, the dopamine levels in those with attention-deficit disorders are lower than in “normal” brains. Psychology Today provides a succinct explanation of how dopamine works in the brain:
“Dopamine is a neurotransmitter that helps control the brain’s reward and pleasure centers. Dopamine also helps regulate movement and emotional responses, and it enables us not only to see rewards but to take action to move toward them. […]The presence of a certain kind of dopamine receptor is also associated with sensation-seeking people, more commonly known as “risk takers.”
In short, dopamine controls how we view reward and pleasure, making you more likely to be impulsive or to crave chocolate. Low dopamine also affects concentration, motivation, and mood – in short, the same symptoms as ADHD.
In men, that’s pretty much the end of the story. However, in women, it’s different. Two primary female hormones, estrogen and progesterone, control how dopamine is processed in the brain. During the first half of your cycle, estrogen is high and progesterone is low. As a result, you feel great. However, during the last half of your cycle – around the same time as PMS and your period hit – estrogen levels drop and progesterone levels increase, making you more likely to have difficulty concentrating, controlling emotions, and controlling impulses. And because women with ADHD are more sensitive to low estrogen than neurotypical women, it’s all the more intense and harder to deal with.
Hormones and Medications
Part of how most ADHD medications work, and amphetamines, in particular, is through increasing dopamine levels or through making the brain process the neurotransmitter more slowly. It makes sense then that estrogen and progesterone would affect how the brain processes medications. For instance, taking estrogen generally makes ADHD medications more effective, and taking progesterone makes them less effective. While the synthetic progestins in birth control pills are not progesterone, there is some evidence that they can cause side effects similar to ADHD. Although research has not yet been done, it seems reasonable to conclude that birth control pills might also have a negative effect on ADHD symptoms.
Because so much of this has to do with how the brain processes dopamine, activities that increase dopamine should be your first step.
It isn’t in your head: your ADHD symptoms really do get worse when you are nearing the end of your cycle. Luckily, there are things that you can do about it. If the above tips aren’t enough to help you get through each month, talk to your doctor. Because of the differences in how women’s brains process amphetamines, adjustments may be needed for your medications.