Mood, sexuality, hormones, and the menstrual cycle. II. Hormone levels and their relationship to the premenstrual syndrome

Psychosomatic medicine, 45(6), 503-507

DOI 10.1097/00006842-198312000-00004 PMID 6686333 Source

Abstract

In women with premenstrual syndrome, negative changes start soon after ovulation gradually increasing as the corpus luteum develops, and reach a maximum during the last 5 days of the luteal phase. They decline rapidly once menstruation starts, disappearing within one or two days of ovarian steroids reaching baseline levels. Positive moods are at maximum when preovulatory estradiol reaches its peak. A comparison of hormone levels in women with high and low degrees of cyclical mood change showed no difference in progesterone, estradiol, testosterone, or androstenedione.

Topics

premenstrual syndrome hormone levels, pms progesterone estradiol, luteal phase mood changes, pms testosterone androstenedione, hormone fluctuations premenstrual symptoms, cyclical mood changes hormones, pms corpus luteum hormones, estradiol peak mood positive, menstrual cycle mood hormones, premenstrual negative mood progesterone

Cite this article

Sanders, D., Leask, R., Davidson, D., Warner, P., Bancroft, J., & Bäckström, T. (1983). Mood, sexuality, hormones, and the menstrual cycle. II. Hormone levels and their relationship to the premenstrual syndrome. *Psychosomatic medicine*, *45*(6), 503-507. https://doi.org/10.1097/00006842-198312000-00004

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