If your premenstrual week feels less like irritability and bloating and more like falling into a hole — depression, rage, anxiety, suicidal thoughts that lift within a day or two of your period starting — you might be dealing with PMDD, not regular PMS. So what is PMDD, and how do you tell? Premenstrual dysphoric disorder is a distinct mental-health condition that the DSM-5 formally recognized in 2013, and it’s treated very differently from ordinary PMS.

About 2% of women of reproductive age meet full diagnostic criteria for PMDD.1 2 That’s roughly 1 in 50. It’s not rare — it’s underdiagnosed.
Quick answer
PMDD is a cyclical mood disorder where severe psychological symptoms — depression, anxiety, anger, hopelessness — show up in the week or two before your period and clear within a few days of bleeding starting. It’s not a hormonal imbalance; it’s an unusual sensitivity to normal hormonal fluctuations. Diagnosis requires symptom tracking over at least two cycles, and the most effective treatments are SSRIs (often cycle-timed), specific hormonal contraceptives, and CBT.
How PMDD is different from PMS
| PMS | PMDD | |
|---|---|---|
| Prevalence | ~48% of women have some symptoms | ~2% meet diagnostic criteria |
| Primary symptoms | Physical + mild mood | Severe mood and psychological |
| Functional impairment | Mild to moderate | Significant — work, relationships, daily life |
| Suicidal thoughts | Uncommon | Reported in a meaningful minority |
| Treatment | Lifestyle, supplements, NSAIDs | SSRIs, hormonal therapy, CBT |
The line between “very bad PMS” and PMDD is real but not always obvious. The diagnostic question isn’t “are your symptoms bad?” — it’s “are they severe enough to genuinely disrupt your work, your relationships, or your basic functioning during the luteal phase?”
If you’re not sure where you fall, natural PMS remedies that actually work is the right starting point for mild-to-moderate symptoms. PMDD usually needs more.
DSM-5 criteria for PMDD
Per the DSM-5, a diagnosis of PMDD requires at least 5 symptoms in the final week of the luteal phase, improving within a few days of menses onset, and minimal in the week after. At least one must be a “core” emotional symptom:
Core symptoms (at least one required):
- Marked affective lability — sudden mood swings, sadness, sensitivity to rejection
- Marked irritability or anger, or increased interpersonal conflicts
- Marked depressed mood, hopelessness, or self-deprecating thoughts
- Marked anxiety, tension, or feeling “on edge”
Additional symptoms (count toward the total of 5): 5. Decreased interest in usual activities 6. Difficulty concentrating 7. Lethargy, fatigue, low energy 8. Marked change in appetite, food cravings, or overeating 9. Hypersomnia or insomnia 10. Sense of being overwhelmed or out of control 11. Physical symptoms: breast tenderness, joint or muscle pain, bloating, weight gain
The symptoms must cause clinically significant distress or interference with work, school, social activities, or relationships — and they must be confirmed by prospective daily ratings for at least two symptomatic cycles. That last bit matters: doctors can’t diagnose PMDD from a single retrospective conversation.

What causes PMDD?
The honest answer: nobody knows the exact mechanism. The leading hypothesis is that women with PMDD have a heightened central nervous system response to normal fluctuations in estrogen and progesterone — and especially to allopregnanolone, a neurosteroid metabolite of progesterone that acts on GABA receptors in the brain.2 3
In other words:
- Your hormone levels are usually normal, not abnormal
- Your brain reacts to those normal levels in an exaggerated way
- The reaction is mediated by serotonin and GABA pathways, which is why SSRIs and certain hormonal contraceptives help
There’s also a genetic component — twin studies suggest 30–50% heritability — and the disorder often appears or worsens after major hormonal transitions like puberty, after childbirth, or in the years approaching perimenopause.
Suggested read: Perimenopause: Symptoms, Duration, and Treatment Guide
Risk factors
You’re more likely to have PMDD if you have:
- A personal or family history of mood disorders (especially major depression, anxiety, or postpartum depression)
- A history of trauma or chronic stress
- Underlying anxiety disorder
- A first-degree relative with PMDD or severe PMS
- A history of postpartum mood symptoms
PMDD is also associated with elevated risk of suicidal ideation, particularly during the luteal phase. This is part of why catching it matters — it’s not “just PMS.”
How PMDD is diagnosed
Real diagnosis takes time. The standard process:
- Daily symptom tracking for at least two full menstrual cycles using a validated tool like the Daily Record of Severity of Problems (DRSP). This is non-negotiable — without prospective tracking, you can’t separate PMDD from chronic depression with a premenstrual exacerbation.
- Rule out medical mimics: thyroid disorders, anemia, perimenopause, chronic fatigue conditions.
- Rule out psychiatric mimics: major depressive disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, and bipolar disorder can all flare premenstrually. The pattern of complete or near-complete symptom relief in the follicular phase (the first half of the cycle) is what distinguishes PMDD.
If your symptoms are present throughout the cycle but worsen before your period, that’s likely premenstrual exacerbation of an underlying disorder — also a real condition, but treated differently from pure PMDD.
Suggested read: Binge Eating Disorder: Symptoms, Causes, and Getting Help
Treatments that actually work for PMDD
SSRIs (first-line for moderate-to-severe PMDD)
Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors are the most evidence-backed pharmacological treatment for PMDD and work in two dosing patterns:4
- Continuous daily dosing — same as treating depression
- Luteal-phase dosing — taken only from ovulation until period starts, then stopped
- Symptom-onset dosing — started the day symptoms appear each cycle
PMDD-responsive SSRIs (fluoxetine, sertraline, paroxetine) tend to work within hours to days for premenstrual symptoms, much faster than the 4–6 weeks they need for major depression. That fast response is consistent with the serotonin pathway being directly involved in PMDD’s pathophysiology.
Hormonal contraceptives
Specific oral contraceptives — particularly those containing drospirenone with a shortened or eliminated hormone-free interval — have FDA-grade evidence for PMDD.4 5 Traditional 21/7 birth control pills often don’t help and can even make symptoms worse, because the hormone-free week itself can trigger a withdrawal-like dip.
Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT)
CBT specifically tailored to PMDD has good evidence for reducing symptom severity, particularly for the mood, anxiety, and interpersonal pieces. It doesn’t change the hormonal trigger, but it changes your response to the trigger — which is often the part that’s making life unworkable.
GnRH agonists (severe cases)
For PMDD that doesn’t respond to SSRIs or hormonal contraception, gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonists can chemically suppress ovulation. This is highly effective but requires “add-back” estrogen and progesterone to protect bone density — it’s a specialist-managed option.
Lifestyle adjuncts
These won’t replace the above for true PMDD, but they meaningfully help:
- Aerobic exercise: 30 minutes, 3–5 days a week
- Calcium 1,200 mg/day: see calcium for PMS
- Vitamin B6 50–100 mg/day: see vitamin B6 for PMS
- Sleep: the luteal phase disrupts sleep architecture — protecting it matters
- Stress reduction: because cortisol amplifies everything (how to lower cortisol)
- Reducing alcohol and caffeine in the second half of the cycle
Things that don’t work for PMDD
- “Hormone balance” herbal blends — chasteberry has some evidence for PMS but is not a PMDD-grade treatment
- Progesterone supplementation alone — the older theory that PMDD is from progesterone deficiency hasn’t held up
- “Adrenal fatigue” protocols — adrenal fatigue is not a recognized medical diagnosis
- Generic multivitamins — the dose of any single relevant nutrient is usually too low
When to see a doctor
You should bring this up with a doctor — ideally a GP or gynecologist familiar with PMDD — if:
- Symptoms genuinely disrupt your work, school, or relationships for several days a month
- You’ve had two cycles or more of prospective tracking and the pattern fits
- You’ve tried first-line lifestyle interventions consistently and they aren’t enough
- You’re having any thoughts of self-harm or suicide — at any point in the cycle
- Hormonal contraception worsens your symptoms (this is diagnostic-relevant)
Bring your tracking data with you. Doctors who haven’t been trained on PMDD specifically can mistake it for cyclical depression, anxiety, or even bipolar disorder — your prospective symptom record is the single best tool for getting the right diagnosis.
Suggested read: What Is Perimenopause? Plain-English Guide to the Transition
Bottom line
PMDD is a real, recognized disorder — not a personality problem and not just “bad PMS.” It hits roughly 2% of women, runs in families, and is treatable. The diagnostic criterion that matters most isn’t symptom intensity in isolation, but the pattern: severe psychological symptoms confined to the luteal phase, clearing within days of bleeding starting, confirmed across at least two cycles of prospective tracking.
If that description matches your experience, start tracking, bring the data to a doctor, and don’t accept “everyone has PMS” as a response.
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Hantsoo L, Epperson CN. Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder: Epidemiology and Treatment. Current Psychiatry Reports. 2015;17(11):87. PubMed | DOI ↩︎ ↩︎
Takeda T. Premenstrual disorders: Premenstrual syndrome and premenstrual dysphoric disorder. Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology Research. 2022;49(2):510-518. PubMed | DOI ↩︎
Yonkers KA, Simoni MK. Premenstrual disorders. American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology. 2018;218(1):68-74. PubMed | DOI ↩︎ ↩︎
Cerqueira RO, Frey BN, Leclerc E, Brietzke E. Vitex agnus castus for premenstrual syndrome and premenstrual dysphoric disorder: a systematic review. Archives of Women’s Mental Health. 2017;20(6):713-719. PubMed | DOI ↩︎





