The hormonal changes women often experience during menopause can cause physical symptoms like hot flushes, night sweats, and headaches. But these changes can also manifest in emotional symptoms, such as mood swings. These are extreme or abrupt fluctuations in mood, where you can go from laughing one minute to crying the next.
More than half of all women experience mood swings during menopause, and while it’s a common symptom, it can nevertheless be a traumatic and troubling time for those who suffer from it.
Mood swings are largely the result of hormonal changes in a woman’s body, where levels of hormones such as estrogen (which regulates the production of serotonin, a mood-regulating transmitter) are reduced. They can also be caused by the physical symptoms of menopause. If a woman is experiencing headaches, night sweats, and hot flushes, she may not be sleeping properly and this can go on to affect her emotional state.
Other things that can contribute to mood swings include major events in a woman’s life. At the time of menopause she may be looking after elderly parents, having marriage trouble, mourning the fact that she can no longer have children, or be experiencing ‘empty nest’ syndrome after her children have left home. All of these events can contribute to mood swings during menopause.
Common symptoms of mood swings include frequent mood changes, inexplicable emotions, sadness, lethargy, irritability, aggression, lack of patience, anxiety, and nervousness.
Because we know that mood swings are largely caused by fluctuating levels in hormones like estrogen and progesterone, there are treatments available that can help to rectify this imbalance. Three common ways to treat mood swings include lifestyle changes, alternative medicines, and bio-identical hormone replacement therapy.
Making changes to your lifestyle is a low-impact way to help regulate mood swings. This can be achieved through a combination of:
The most popular way to treat menopausal mood swings with alternative medicines is by using natural supplements. These can include:
In recent years, the use of synthetic hormones in hormone replacement therapy (HRT) has been linked with an increased risk of breast cancer and heart disease. Bio-identical hormone replacement therapy (BHRT) instead makes use of natural hormones, which are considered a perfectly safe alternative to synthetic hormones.
Natural bio-identical hormone replacement therapy involves treating menopausal mood swings with ‘bio-identicals’. These are natural progesterone molecules that are identical those produced by the human body. Bio-identical hormones such as estradiol and micronised progesterone are just as effective as synthetic hormones, but natural and come without the risk factor, having been used to treat menopausal women in Europe for many years.
While mood swings during menopause are normal for the majority of women, sometimes they can be an indication of a more serious condition. Conditions that could be related to serious mood swings include:
Mood swings experienced during menopause are normally symptoms of a hormonal imbalance and can be effectively treated in most cases. If there is evidence of more severe or long-lasting mood swings however, you should consider talking to your doctor.