How hormones and the menstrual cycle can affect women with ADHD: Five common questions
May
Have you noticed your levels of attention may slightly change during your menstrual cycle?
This may be particularly noticeable for women and people assigned female at birth with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). They have differences in their ability to easily focus and sustain their attention. There may be times during their menstrual cycle when it seems harder to plan, organise and focus their attention. And they may find their ADHD medication doesn’t seem to work as well.
Very little research has explored the interaction between female hormones and symptoms of ADHD. But women with ADHD could gain much from greater insights into the mechanisms of this effect.
Here are five questions women and girls commonly ask about their hormones and ADHD symptoms.
1. Can hormones impact ADHD symptoms?
There’s growing awareness of the relationship between sex hormones and neurotransmitters. Neurotransmitters pass messages between neurons in the brain.
Dopamine is a neurotransmitter important for motivation, reinforcement and reward. It’s a chemical that makes you feel good, and has key roles for our executive functions, including attention.
For people with ADHD, the regulation of dopamine is thought to differ. For example, it’s thought there are lower levels of dopamine in the brain’s synapses (the connections between neurons) in people with ADHD.
Our best current theory is that lowered synaptic dopamine contributes to ADHD symptoms and difficulties with focusing attention in a flexible way, maintaining attention and regulating activity levels.
Medications for ADHD, such as the psychostimulant methylphenidate (usually called Ritalin), help to make more dopamine available in the synapse. We think this is one of the reasons why symptoms of ADHD reduce and attention is improved with ADHD medication.
Sex hormones, including estrogen and progesterone, fluctuate naturally through different phases of a woman’s life. Fluctuations in sex hormone levels can affect brain function by altering levels of neurotransmitters, including dopamine and serotonin, which is important for mood.
The relationship between sex hormones and neurotransmitter levels is complex. Animal studies have shown higher levels of estrogen are linked to increased levels of dopamine. Progesterone also appears to influence dopamine levels, but the relationship between dopamine and progesterone is less clear.
Read more: Autism is still underdiagnosed in girls and women. That can compound the challenges they face
2. What happens to my attention over my menstrual cycle?
Estrogen and progesterone levels fluctuate across the menstrual cycle. The key phases of the menstrual cycle are the follicular phase (referring to the first days of menstruation until ovulation), and the luteal phase (the days between ovulation and the following the period).
Estrogen levels gradually rise during the follicular phase, fall after ovulation, and rise again during the mid-luteal phase, before decreasing at the end of the cycle. Progesterone levels are low during the follicular phase, and rise in the luteal phase.
Research exploring whether attention changes across the menstrual cycle is inconsistent.
However, for women sensitive to menstrual cycle hormone fluctuations, the premenstrual or late luteal phase is associated with poorer attention, higher anxiety and stress, or at the more severe end of the mood spectrum, premenstrual dysphoric disorder (a severe form of premenstrual syndrome).
Studies show some attention-related tasks are performed better when there are higher levels of estrogen, such as before ovulation. Performance may be poorer when there are lower levels of estrogen and higher levels of progesterone, such as in the couple of weeks after ovulation and before menstruation.
This fits with what many women with ADHD report anecdotally – their attention is better before ovulation, and can worsen after.
3. What if I’m on the contraceptive pill?
There’s little research on this for women with ADHD. Oral contraceptive pills don’t appear to alter attention in the general population, but they can increase depression risk in some women.
For girls and women with ADHD, research suggests the risk of depression when using oral contraceptives is even higher.
Read more: I think I have ADHD. How do I get a diagnosis? What might it mean for me?
4. What will happen to my ADHD symptoms if I have a baby?
Estrogen levels increase during pregnancy, and drop after birth. These and other hormonal changes at this time have potential to impact cognition and ADHD symptoms.
However, there’s a lack of research in pregnant women with ADHD, how ADHD symptoms might change, and whether ADHD medications may need to be stopped or adjusted.
5. What about when I’m perimenopausal or in menopause?
The fluctuating and eventually declining levels of estrogen (specifically estradiol) during perimenopause are associated with “brain fog” for many women. Symptoms often include difficulties with attention and higher-order executive functions (such as planning, organising and decision-making).
While studies haven’t specifically investigated ADHD symptoms during menopause, a recent study found four weeks of psychostimulant use improved mid-life-onset executive-function difficulties in perimenopausal and early post-menopausal women.
Anecdotally, women with ADHD report their ADHD symptoms can worsen during perimenopause and menopause.
Read more: ‘Brain fog’ during menopause is real – it can disrupt women’s work and spark dementia fears
What needs to happen next
Women and girls with ADHD have been neglected for too long. Learning more about how hormones impact ADHD symptoms in women and girls with ADHD is an urgent research need.
Such work could lead to clinical guidelines about altering medications for ADHD as hormones fluctuate, specific hormone treatments for girls and women with ADHD, and how women with ADHD can best be supported.
For now, girls and women with ADHD should talk to their doctor (a general practitioner, psychiatrist, paediatrician or gynaecologist/obstetrician) about their individual circumstances and what support they may benefit from.
As researchers, we want to hear about your experiences. If you’re interested in participating in a survey about how ADHD presents in women at different life phases, please follow this link.
This article originally appeared on The Conversation.
About the Authors
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Tamara may
Research Fellow, Paediatrics, Monash Health, Monash University
Tamara is a senior research fellow in the Department of Paediatrics at Monash University. She is an established independent researcher and active collaborator for team-based research, advancing knowledge about autism, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, other neurodevelopmental disorders and mental health problems, including complex trauma and depression. She is a clinician scientist with expertise in psychology and information technology.
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Caroline gurvich
Associate professor and Clinical Neuropsychologist, Central Clinical School
Caroline is an Associate Professor and a Clinical Neuropsychologist within the Department of Psychiatry at Monash University. She is the Head of the Cognition and Hormones research group and works clinically as a neuropschologist in the field of Women's Mental Health. Caroline’s research explores the interplay between sex hormones, and lifestyle factors, such as trauma and stress, on cognition in mental illness.
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Mark bellgrove
Professor (Research), Psychology, Monash University
Mark is Director of Research at the Turner Institute for Brain and Mental Health, and a Professor in Cognitive Neuroscience in the School of Psychological Sciences, at Monash University, where he leads a multidisciplinary team studying the biological basis of attention and cognitive control.
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