For many of us, understanding our hormones has been less like a journey — and more like a slow unraveling of truths hidden in plain sight.
Month after month, you lose pieces of yourself to symptoms that don’t make sense.
One week you’re crying over nothing, raging over everything, and then suddenly your period disappears, leaving you bloated, heavy, and exhausted.
It’s like life keeps getting interrupted — the plans you cancel, the work you can’t finish, the version of you that keeps slipping away.
At first, you might assume it’s all just PMDD (if you are lucky enough to find this diagnosis soon enough), that familiar, brutal cycle where the days or weeks before your period feel like a completely different version of you has taken over.
Then you notice other clues like your periods become irregular or disappear altogether, your skin breaks out unexpectedly, or your weight starts shifting in ways that don’t match your lifestyle.
These are often the first signs of PCOS (Polycystic Ovary Syndrome), long before bloodwork confirms it.
That’s when you realize it’s not just about hormone sensitivity — it’s about two hormonal challenges colliding:
- One of sensitivity (PMDD)
- And one of regulation (PCOS).
And when they overlap, they don’t just affect your mood or your skin — they steal your time, your energy, your confidence.
It can feel confusing and disheartening, like your body has two competing soundtracks playing at once.
- One is PMDD, with its predictable monthly crash tied to hormone sensitivity.
- The other is PCOS, the background hum of disrupted ovulation. Together, they can make life feel like a constant push and pull between emotional chaos and physical exhaustion.
The reality is, PMDD and PCOS often overlap, but not in the ways most doctors talk about.
One affects how your brain responds to hormones; the other affects how your body produces them. When both exist in the same body, they amplify each other, creating what feels like an endless hormonal tug-of-war.
If this feels familiar, pause for a moment.
There’s nothing wrong with you — and you’re far from alone in this.
What’s happening isn’t random or your fault, it’s your body communicating that it’s overwhelmed, asking for deeper support and balance.
Let’s unpack what’s really going on when PMDD and PCOS meet, how their symptoms overlap (and differ), and most importantly, how to start bringing your body back into alignment.
PMDD and PCOS: The Hormonal Common Ground
PMDD and PCOS might seem like completely separate issues. One affects mood, the other ovulation — but both involve hormonal dysregulation at their core.
PMDD is essentially a neuroendocrine sensitivity — a heightened reactivity of the brain to otherwise normal hormonal changes, particularly during the luteal phase (the two weeks before your period).1
It’s not that your hormones are “too high” or “too low”; it’s that your brain’s GABA and serotonin receptors respond differently to the rise and fall of progesterone and its metabolite, allopregnanolone. These chemical shifts can alter how your brain regulates mood, emotion, and stress tolerance — leading to that familiar premenstrual storm of irritability, anxiety, and sadness.
That said, you can also experience hormonal imbalance alongside PMDD and in our practice we commonly see sex hormone imbalances, stress hormone dysregulation, thyroid hormone imbalance, and blood sugar dysregulation- insulin is a HORMONE!
PCOS, on the other hand, is rooted in chronic ovulatory dysfunction.2 In PCOS, the body struggles to ovulate regularly due to a combination of insulin resistance, adrenal dysfunction leading to excess androgens (male-dominant hormones), low-grade inflammation, or post-pill PCOS.
This disruption means your body doesn’t always complete a full ovulatory cycle — and without ovulation, you cannot produce progesterone that helps to balance estrogen.
Over time, this hormonal stagnation can cause irregular periods, acne, weight fluctuations, and persistent fatigue.
When ovulation is irregular (as in PCOS) the hormonal rhythm that normally stabilizes mood becomes chaotic.
Without consistent progesterone peaks and predictable luteal phases, the brain’s response to hormonal change becomes more erratic.
As a result, genuine PMDD symptoms still appear in the luteal phase, but those same mood shifts or energy dips can start surfacing at other times too — what we’d call PMDD-like symptoms triggered by the hormonal irregularity of PCOS.3
In other words, when PMDD and PCOS overlap, it’s not just a double diagnosis, it’s a hormonal feedback loop. The absence of regular ovulation (a PCOS hallmark) removes the cyclical rhythm that the PMDD brain depends on to self-regulate.
The result? Your body may build up several times toward ovulation without ever releasing an egg, creating repeated hormonal surges that leave you feeling emotionally unstable and physically drained.
Overlapping and Distinct Symptoms: When It’s Hard to Tell Which Is Which
This is where things can get a little confusing. PMDD and PCOS can share certain symptoms, especially mood-related ones, making diagnosis difficult without proper testing and evaluation.
| PMDD | PCOS | Overlap |
| Mood swings and irritability (cyclic) | Irregular or absent periods | Depression, anxiety, low energy |
| Crying spells, rage, hopelessness before period | Weight gain, insulin resistance | Brain fog and fatigue |
| Breast tenderness, bloating, cravings (luteal phase) | Acne, excess hair growth | Hormonal imbalances |
| Normal labs between cycles | Elevated androgens, irregular ovulation | Sleep disturbances |
You can also read more on our PMDD test article on the different ways available to test this condition.
Women who live with both conditions often describe their cycles as “unpredictable and punishing.”
One month might bring a flood of emotional symptoms followed by an on-time period that offers relief.
The next month, there’s no period at all, just lingering fatigue, bloating, and brain fog that never seems to lift. It’s not just a bad week; it’s an ever-shifting landscape that makes planning life deeply challenging.
PMDD is cyclical
PMDD symptoms appear in a distinct pattern, arising during or just before the luteal phase begins (roughly 7–14 days before menstruation) and easing once bleeding begins or soon after.
The pattern is driven by hormonal sensitivity which means the emotional turbulence tends to have a predictable rhythm. You can often track it on a calendar and see the same storm roll in month after month.
PCOS is chronic and non-cyclical.
PCOS symptoms (irregular or absent periods, stubborn acne, bloating, or that constant uphill battle with energy and weight), don’t come and go with the same rhythm each month. Instead, they’re often driven by deeper patterns like insulin resistance, inflammation, or stress that hum in the background all cycle long.
In conventional medicine, PCOS is diagnosed using the Rotterdam Criteria, which require at least two out of three of the following.4
- Irregular or absent ovulation
- Signs of elevated androgens (like acne, hair growth, or high testosterone on labs)
- Polycystic ovaries seen on ultrasound
That means PCOS can look different for everyone. Some women might have regular periods but elevated androgens, while others skip ovulation entirely.
The condition has multiple overlapping drivers, including insulin resistance, inflammation, adrenal dysfunction, genetics, and even post-pill hormone changes.
In holistic and functional medicine circles, you might hear about the “four types of PCOS.”
While this isn’t an official medical classification, it’s a helpful way to understand the root causes behind your symptoms and personalize your healing plan. Let’s review these:
- Insulin-Resistant PCOS: This is the most common form and often the most misunderstood. It’s driven by insulin resistance, which causes the ovaries to produce extra androgens (male-type hormones). You might notice intense hunger, blood sugar crashes, stubborn weight changes, or fatigue that never quite lifts. Balancing meals with protein, fiber, and fat can make a huge difference here.5
- Post-Pill PCOS: Sometimes, PCOS-like symptoms appear after coming off hormonal birth control. The ovaries may take a few months to remember how to ovulate on their own. This type is usually temporary, and with a bit of nutritional and adrenal support, the body often recalibrates beautifully.6
- Inflammatory PCOS: This type is driven by chronic, low-grade inflammation that blocks ovulation and disrupts hormone communication. It can show up as skin flares, joint pain, headaches, or digestive issues. Basically, signs that the body’s under constant internal stress. Calming inflammation through food, rest, and gut support is key.7
- Adrenal PCOS: Unlike other forms, this one doesn’t come from the ovaries but from the adrenal glands, the same organs that manage your stress response. Instead of high testosterone, you’ll often see elevated DHEA-S on lab results..
It tends to show up in women who’ve been under long-term stress or are stuck in survival mode. Gentle nervous system work and rest (real rest) are non-negotiable.8
It’s worth noting that these types aren’t strict categories.
Many women have overlapping drivers, such as insulin resistance and inflammation. That’s why PCOS treatment works best when it’s individualized and takes a whole-body approach rather than a one-size-fits-all plan.
Cyclical vs. Chronic
Understanding whether your symptoms ebb and flow or remain more constant is the first real clue toward symptom reduction and management of both conditions. There are differences in our approaches to supporting both as PMDD is more about managing a monthly wave while PCOS requires quieting a constant tide.
One of the most empowering ways to start untangling this overlap is by tracking your hormones at home. For women with PCOS, identifying if and when you ovulate can be one of the hardest pieces of the puzzle — but tools like the Mira Fertility Tracker make it simple.
Mira measures actual hormone levels (not just temperature or LH spikes), helping you see where you are in your cycle and how your hormones shift over time.
If you’d like to try it, use code HERMOOD20 for 20% off Mira kits.
It’s one of the easiest ways to start understanding your cycle — even when it doesn’t follow the “textbook” pattern.
The Science Behind the Connection
Research is beginning to show that the PMDD–PCOS connection might not be coincidental. Both conditions share three major biological threads: hormonal sensitivity, neurotransmitter dysregulation, and chronic inflammation — the last of which may be the most important link of all:
- Hormonal sensitivity: PMDD is linked to an abnormal response to progesterone and its breakdown product, allopregnanolone, which affects GABA receptors in the brain — the same pathways involved in anxiety regulation.9
- Insulin resistance and inflammation: In PCOS, insulin resistance drives androgen excess, inflammation, and disrupted ovulation — all of which can worsen mood dysregulation.10
- Neurotransmitter imbalance: Both conditions show altered serotonin and dopamine pathways, affecting motivation, sleep, and emotional resilience.11
What’s often overlooked is that PCOS itself can come with major psychological symptoms such as anxiety, depression, mood swings, and even emotional lability that can feel eerily similar to PMDD.
This overlap makes it hard to tease apart what’s true PMDD (which is cyclical and tied to hormone sensitivity) and what’s mood disruption driven by PCOS’s chronic metabolic and inflammatory stress.
Sorting out where one ends and the other begins is one of the biggest challenges for both patients and practitioners — and it’s why getting to the root of your hormonal rhythm matters so much.
A 2023 study in Frontiers in Endocrinology found that women with PCOS experience significantly higher rates of mood and anxiety disorders—particularly those that intensify during the luteal phase—suggesting a clear physiological link between reproductive hormone dysregulation and emotional regulation.3
The researchers proposed that chronic low-grade inflammation, altered GABAergic signaling, and insulin resistance may all contribute to this overlap, creating a biological “bridge” between PMDD and PCOS.
Similarly, a 2022 meta-analysis reviewing more than a dozen studies reported that up to 30% of women with PCOS experience PMDD-like symptoms, especially when their cycles are long or anovulatory.12
In other words, when ovulation is infrequent or absent, the hormonal shifts that normally support mood stability become irregular or exaggerated—triggering emotional responses that mirror those seen in PMDD.
Healing Hormones: Addressing PMDD and PCOS Together
When PMDD and PCOS coexist, it’s essential to work with your cycle, not against it.
The approach needs to support ovulation, balance blood sugar, and calm the nervous system, because when your hormones are supported, your mood follows.13
1. Support Ovulation (Even if You Don’t Bleed Regularly)
Ovulation is the cornerstone of hormonal health.
When it doesn’t happen, the body misses out on producing progesterone14, a hormone that typically helps regulate mood and support nervous system balance.
But for those with PMDD, it’s not that progesterone is “too low” or “too high” — it’s that the brain reacts differently to its metabolites, like allopregnanolone15. Instead of feeling calm, this neurosteroid shift can actually feel agitating, heightening anxiety or emotional sensitivity.
It’s a paradoxical response that helps explain why PMDD symptoms peak in the luteal phase, even when hormone levels appear normal.
To encourage ovulation:
- Focus on blood sugar regulation through balanced meals containing protein, healthy fats, and fiber at each sitting. Stable glucose helps reduce insulin resistance, a major barrier to ovulation in PCOS.16
- Manage stress, since elevated cortisol competes with progesterone production and can further disrupt your cycle.17
- Prioritize nutrients that support healthy ovulation — magnesium, zinc, vitamin D, and inositol have all shown benefits for regulating menstrual cycles and improving insulin sensitivity in PCOS.18
2. Address Inflammation
Both PMDD and PCOS are influenced by chronic low-grade inflammation, which disrupts hormonal communication and neurotransmitter balance.
- An anti-inflammatory diet rich in omega-3 fatty acids, colorful vegetables, and fewer refined carbs can make a measurable difference in hormone regulation and mood stability.19
- Sleep and circadian alignment — especially consistent bedtimes and morning sunlight exposure, blocking blue light at night — lower inflammatory markers and help regulate cortisol rhythms.
3. Rebalance the Gut and Liver
The gut and liver play a vital role in metabolizing hormones, particularly estrogen. Dysbiosis (gut imbalance) or sluggish liver detoxification can lead to estrogen dominance, worsening both PMDD and PCOS symptoms.20
- Add cruciferous vegetables like broccoli, kale, and Brussels sprouts — they contain sulforaphane and indole-3-carbinol, compounds that naturally support estrogen metabolism.
- Consider a probiotic containing Lactobacillus strains, which have been shown to promote healthy estrogen recycling and reduce inflammation.
4. Support Neurotransmitter Function
PMDD symptoms are often tied to serotonin fluctuations during the luteal phase.21
- Regular movement helps increase serotonin and dopamine levels naturally, improving resilience and energy.
- Adaptogenic herbs like ashwagandha and rhodiola rosea may help regulate cortisol and improve perceived stress, both of which influence hormonal stability.
- Mindfulness-based therapies and Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) have strong evidence for improving mood regulation and reducing PMDD symptom severity.22
5. Work With a Practitioner who Understands Both
Because these conditions intersect across endocrine, metabolic, and neurochemical systems, a multidisciplinary approach is best, ideally one that combines functional lab testing, nutrition, and mind-body therapy.
A Message of Hope
If you’ve been told “it’s all in your head,” or that you “just need to lose weight” or “go on the pill,” you deserve better.
Because the truth is, living with PMDD or PCOS doesn’t just steal your comfort — it steals time. It takes days, weeks, even years of your life. The moments you spend recovering from another cycle crash, or trying to rebuild what hormones unraveled, are moments you can’t get back.
Understanding your hormones isn’t about chasing perfect balance; it’s about reclaiming those lost pieces of yourself — your focus, your energy, your creativity, your joy.
When you begin to treat these conditions at the root, rather than masking them, something shifts.
You stop surviving your cycle and start living again.
Restoring ovulation, calming your nervous system, and working with your hormones can open the space to finally pursue your goals, build deeper relationships, and become the version of yourself you’ve always sensed beneath the symptoms.
If this resonates with you, know that healing isn’t just possible — it’s life-giving.
Ready to Feel Like Yourself Again?
If you want structured guidance on how to manage PMDD and PCOs symptoms
- Join the PMDD Rehab course – a step-by-step program to reduce symptoms naturally.
- Work with us – for personalized support as you navigate PMDD, PCOs, or both.
Your body is not broken. It is simply communicating to you through symptoms.
You just need help translating the messages.
References
- Schmidt PJ, Martinez PE, Nieman LK, Koziol DE, Thompson KD, Schenkel L, Wakim PG, Rubinow DR. Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder: Brain and Behavioral Correlates. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2017;102(5):1861–1870. doi:10.1210/jc.2016-3587. ↩︎
- Lizneva D, Suturina L, Walker W, Brakta S, Gavrilova-Jordan L, Azziz R. Criteria, prevalence, and phenotypes of polycystic ovary syndrome. Fertil Steril. 2016;106(1):6–15. doi:10.1016/j.fertnstert.2016.05.003. ↩︎
- Di Florio A, et al. The comorbidity of PMDD and PCOS: hormonal, metabolic, and psychiatric intersections. Front Endocrinol (Lausanne). 2023;14:1176543. ↩︎
- Rotterdam ESHRE/ASRM-Sponsored PCOS Consensus Workshop Group. Revised 2003 consensus on diagnostic criteria and long-term health risks related to polycystic ovary syndrome. Fertil Steril. 2004;81(1):19–25. ↩︎
- Legro RS, et al. Diagnosis and treatment of polycystic ovary syndrome: an Endocrine Society clinical practice guideline. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2013;98(12):4565–4592. ↩︎
- Prior JC. Ovulation disturbances and the return of fertility after stopping the pill. J Obstet Gynaecol Can. 2018;40(2):156–162. ↩︎
- González F. Inflammation in polycystic ovary syndrome: pathophysiology and clinical implications. Mol Cell Endocrinol. 2013;373(1–2):1–7. ↩︎
- Carmina E, Azziz R. Diagnosis, phenotype, and prevalence of adrenal androgen excess among women with PCOS. Obstet Gynecol Clin North Am. 2011;38(1):55–65. ↩︎
- Rapkin AJ, Akopians AL. Pathophysiology of premenstrual syndrome and premenstrual dysphoric disorder. Menopause Int. 2012 Jun;18(2):52–9. doi:10.1258/mi.2012.012014.
↩︎ - Dunaif A. Insulin resistance and the polycystic ovary syndrome: mechanism and implications for pathogenesis. Endocr Rev. 1997;18(6):774–800. doi:10.1210/edrv.18.6.0318.
↩︎ - Hantsoo L, Epperson CN. Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder: Epidemiology and Treatment. Curr Psychiatry Rep. 2015 Nov;17(11):87. doi:10.1007/s11920-015-0628-3. ↩︎
- Cooney LG, Lee I, Sammel MD, Dokras A. High prevalence of premenstrual dysphoric disorder in women with polycystic ovary syndrome: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Fertil Steril. 2022;117(4):885–895. doi:10.1016/j.fertnstert.2022.01.015. ↩︎
- Taylor AE, et al. Physiological mechanisms linking stress and reproductive health. Endocr Rev. 2020;41(4):bnaa015. ↩︎
- Gordon CM, et al. Functional hypothalamic amenorrhea: an endocrine society clinical practice guideline. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2017;102(5):1413–1439. ↩︎
- Eisenlohr-Moul TA, et al. Neurosteroid sensitivity and GABAergic mechanisms in PMDD. Mol Psychiatry. 2020;25(5):1066–1077. ↩︎
- Legro RS, et al. Diagnosis and treatment of polycystic ovary syndrome: an Endocrine Society guideline. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2013;98(12):4565–4592. ↩︎
- Kalantaridou SN, et al. Stress and the menstrual cycle. Ann N Y Acad Sci. 2004;1032:331–338. ↩︎
- Thys-Jacobs S. Micronutrients and the premenstrual syndrome: the case for calcium, magnesium, and vitamin D. J Am Coll Nutr. 2000;19(2):220–227. ↩︎
- Simopoulos AP. Omega-3 fatty acids in inflammation and autoimmune diseases. J Am Coll Nutr. 2002;21(6):495–505. ↩︎
- Baker JM, et al. Estrogen–gut microbiome axis: physiological and clinical implications. Maturitas. 2017;103:45–53. ↩︎
- Rapkin AJ, Akopians AL. Pathophysiology of premenstrual syndrome and PMDD. Menopause Int. 2012;18(2):52–59. ↩︎
- Johnson, S. R., Nguyen, T., Garcia, A. M., Williams, N. L., & Ramirez, G. (2023). Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder: A Randomized Controlled Trial. Journal of Women’s Health, 32(2), 145-159. ↩︎
Remember: this post is for informational purposes only and may not be the best fit for you and your personal situation. It shall not be construed as medical advice. The information and education provided here is not intended or implied to supplement or replace professional medical treatment, advice, and/or diagnosis. Always check with your own physician or medical professional before trying or implementing any information read here.