Women’s Health | IVANA MD | Missouri City, TX
Have you ever felt irritable, anxious, or emotionally drained with no clear explanation? You’re not imagining it. Hormonal fluctuations are one of the most common and most overlooked causes of mood changes in women.
What Are Hormones Doing to Your Mood?
Hormones act as chemical messengers in the body, and several of them directly regulate how you feel emotionally:
Estrogen boosts serotonin, your brain’s natural mood stabilizer. When estrogen drops (during your period, after childbirth, or during perimenopause), serotonin follows, often triggering sadness, irritability, and anxiety.
Cortisol: your stress hormone, is helpful in short bursts but damaging when chronically elevated. Research published in Psychoneuroendocrinology links prolonged high cortisol to depression, brain fog, and poor emotional regulation.
Progesterone has a calming, sedative effect. When it falls sharply before menstruation, many women experience the mood swings associated with PMS or PMDD.
Dopamine drives motivation and pleasure. Low dopamine, often tied to hormonal imbalance, can leave you feeling flat, unmotivated, or emotionally numb.
What Does Science Say?
A 2016 study in JAMA Psychiatry found that women prone to premenstrual mood symptoms show measurable serotonin dysregulation directly tied to estrogen fluctuations. The National Institute of Mental Health also confirms that estrogen enhances serotonin receptor sensitivity, which explains why mood often deteriorates during perimenopause and postpartum periods.
Signs Your Hormones May Be Affecting Your Mood
- Mood swings that follow your menstrual cycle
- Anxiety or depression that worsens before your period
- Persistent fatigue and brain fog
- Difficulty sleeping
- Low motivation or loss of interest in things you enjoy
These are not personality traits. They are medical symptoms with real, treatable causes.
What You Can Do
A women’s health specialist can run targeted hormone panels and create a personalized treatment plan, whether that includes hormone therapy, nutritional support, or lifestyle strategies.
You don’t have to just “push through it.”
Schedule your women’s health appointment with IVANA MD in Missouri City, TX.
Call: 346-585-4077 4220
Cartwright Road, Suite 201, Missouri City, Texas 77459
References
Joffe, H., & Cohen, L. S. (1998). Estrogen, serotonin, and mood disturbance: Where is the therapeutic bridge? Biological Psychiatry, 44(9), 798–811.https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0006322398001693
National Institute of Mental Health. (2023). Postpartum depression. https://www.nimh.nih.gov/health/publications/perinatal-depression
Rivera-Bonet, C. N., Birn, R. M., Ladd, C. O., Meyerand, M. E., & Abercrombie, H. C. (2021). Cortisol effects on brain functional connectivity during emotion processing in women with depression. Journal of Affective Disorders, 287, 247–254 https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0165032721002603
Steiner, M., & Pearlstein, T. (2000). Premenstrual dysphoria and the serotonin system: Pathophysiology and treatment. The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, 61(Suppl 12), 17–21.Premenstrual dysphoria and the serotonin system: pathophysiology and treatment – PubMed
Stephens, M. A., & Wand, G. (2012). Stress and the HPA axis: Role of glucocorticoids in alcohol dependence. Alcohol Research: Current Reviews, 34(4), 468–483. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK278995/







