Hormones & Mood: Is There A Connection Between PPD & Your Period?

Several of you have mentioned your postpartum depression or anxiety getting worse when you return to having periods after your baby is born. You wonder whether this is an indication that you aren't really getting better at all.

If, like me, you are someone who had a perinatal mood or anxiety disorder and also has had premenstrual dysphoric disorder, you can't help but think they are connected in some way. I asked Marlene Freeman, MD, of the Massachusetts General Hospital Center for Women's Mental Health whether there is a known interconnection between postpartum depression and other types of depression that seem to be hormonally related, like premenstrual dysphoric disorder, which is depression and anxiety before your period, and depression during perimenopause. Her answer surprised me:

Postpartum depression. Premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD). Perimenopausal depression. Depression associated with breast milk let down. Mood worsening or improvement with oral contraceptives. Many types of mood disturbances experienced by women over the reproductive cycle are associated with fluctuations of or exposures to gonadal (sex) hormones, primarily estrogen and progesterone.

A woman might experience any of the above. These are real, biologically driven mood disorders or disturbances. It seems intuitive that hormonal changes cause postpartum depression, premenstrual dysphoria (PMDD) and perimenopausal depression, but intuition is not always right, or at least as sophisticated as reality.

There is no simple relationship for women overall between hormones and mood. Variability among women and variability among the lifespan for each woman tells us how complicated the relationship can be. Consider that all postpartum women experience abrupt changes after delivery of estrogen and progesterone levels. A majority of women experience “the baby blues,” but a substantial minority will develop postpartum depression or anxiety.

No single hormonal factor has been found consistently to differentiate those who develop PPD and those who do not. Postpartum depression may certainly be triggered by hormonal changes in some women. However, it is difficult to predict who will be sensitive to hormonal changes. Some women will experience a crashing, immediate-onset depression after delivery, some will experience a sense of being overwhelmed with more gradual mood worsening into a depression, and some women will have depression that started during pregnancy and continued into the postpartum. It is not clear that postpartum depression is a single entity, and it definitely does not appear to have a single cause. We know if a woman has experienced PPD before she is at risk after future deliveries. It is less clear if she is at future risk for PMDD or perimenopausal depression, but it makes good sense to at least monitor her mood and suspect that mood worsening could occur during other reproductive events that are associated with hormonal fluctuations.

Some women will notice the onset of premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD) after they have had children. Some women who already have PPD will notice their mood worsening even more during the premenstrual part of their cycles after their menstrual cycle has resumed. It is reasonable to assume that rather than PPD worsening during the premenstrual (or late luteal) phase, she may be experiencing premenstrual mood worsening or premenstrual mood exacerbation (PME). First line treatments for PMDD and PME are serotonergic antidepressants such as SSRIs, and often higher doses are required during the premenstrual phase of the cycle. [In other words, a mom already on an antidepressant for PPD whose moods worsen during PMS may need a higher dose during that part of the month prior to her period.]

To date, hormonal therapies are used to treat PMDD (in the form of oral contraceptives), hot flashes (estrogen, in numerous forms), and perimenopausal depression (often estrogen and progesterone in combination with an antidepressant). Hormonal treatments have not received adequate study for women with postpartum depression and anxiety. It may certainly be the case that at least a subset of women whose postpartum depression is primarily hormonally driven will be especially responsive to estrogen for example. Studies are underway to assess this as a possible treatment for PPD, as well as to assess which women are most likely to find this as a beneficial treatment.

There is a lot of data backing up the relationship between estrogen and neurotransmitters thought most responsible for mood. However, the actual experience of each woman is different.

I was surprised, because, as Dr. Freeman mentioned, it seems so intuitive that all of these things would be directly related. If your moods are worsening when your period returns, it looks like you may need to look at that as a separate issue from your postpartum depression or anxiety, and talk to your doctor about potential treatment with oral contraceptives and/or a potential temporary increase in your antidepressant. It is comforting, though, to note that a worsening in mood is NOT an indication that you are doomed to having PPD forever or that you've gone back to square one. Like me, you may also have PMDD. As more and more research is done, I hope one day to better understand why I'm so sensitive to hormonal changes, whenever they occur.

This Is What The Baby Blues Looks Like (Hint: NOT Postpartum Depression)

Baby blues is not postpartum depression.

Baby blues is not postpartum depression.

Baby blues is not postpartum depression.

You've heard me say this a million times before. But now I've said it again. ;-)

People who don't believe inpostpartum depressionlove to talk about the "overmedicalization of motherhood". They'll tell you that being a mom is tough. It's not an illness. You don't need a doctor. If you're sad and blue, that's because you are now a parent with a lot of responsiblity, and besides which our society doesn't value or support parents enough, sono wonder you aremiserable. What a red herring.

When we talk about postpartum depression, we'reNOT talking about how hard motherhood is or the fact that new mothers are sleep deprived. We are talking about an illness that arises sometime in the first 12 months after a baby is born that is so serious it impacts a mother's ability to function on a daily basis. Shemay havetrouble eating. She has trouble sleeping, and I don't mean because her baby doesn't sleep. When her baby is sleeping she often can't sleep, even though she's exhausted. She can lose her ability to enjoy most if not all parts of her life. Shemay experience deep sadness and may often cry. She has difficulty caring for either her baby or herself because she is so troubled by how she feels. She mayhave bouts ofuncontrollable anger or irritability. She may be thinking her family would be better off without her. This mom needs a doctor.

When we talk about postpartum depression we are not talking about the baby blues either. No one is suggesting that a woman go out and get treatment if, in the first couple of weeks after the baby is born, she is exhausted and criesfor no reasonand feels a little bewildered. That would make her normal. The majority ofnew momshave this experience, which, according to Dr. Ruta Nonacs, usually peaks on day 4 or 5 postpartum goes away all on its own at about 2 weeks postpartum. These moms don't need professional help. They need time.

Belowis the account ofa new mom who writes about her baby blues. Notice the timing ofher experience: the first couple weeks after birth. Notice what happens: It goes away. Notice whatshe says: I feel better. I'm getting the hang of this.

This story is an exampleof the baby blues. This is what the baby blues looks like. This is nota storyof postpartum depression.

Expecting Words: My Baby Blues

"Thankfully, my mood changed back to normal a couple weeks after the baby arrived. I realized that I had been through a rough patch that was now over. I was back to my normal self. Don’t get me wrong, I was still tired, but I appreciated my family and took great pleasure in holding my little one. I liked watching him rest, eat and sleep."

For a full list of the signs and symptoms of postpartum depression, click the link.

Don't Let the Terms "Baby Blues" or "Mild" Postpartum Depression Fool You

I want you to read this brief but great piece by John McManamy at McMan's Depression & Bipolar Web called "Mental Water Torture". It's about the importance of not blowing off mild to moderate depression until it turns into major depression.His words applyto women with antepartum and postpartum depression as well. If we ignore what we're going through, just hoping it will wear off eventually, we may be sentencing ourselves to something much worse. An excerpt:

"As I sit here writing this, the term mild to moderate depression mocks me. I won't even begin to estimate how many years I've lost to a disorder predicated by the modifiers mild to moderate. The least they could have done was assign the name of a Shakespeare character – Hamlet's disease, Lear's disease, anything, really. Just so long as it doesn't imply I was cut down in the prime of my youth by some invisible stupid nerf bat pounding against the inside of my brain.

For the rest of you: You can end it right now. You don't have to endure the mental water torture any longer."

Why do we wait to reach out for treatment when we know something is wrong? Many reasons. There's stigma and thefear of facing the unknown (including medication and therapy for those who've never had it). There are those of us who just don't pay attention to how we're feeling and those of us who always put others ahead of ourselves. There are those of us who decide this is just the "baby blues", even though the baby blues is a normal adjustment period that resolves itself approximately 3 weeks after delivery, and we are still feeling bad, perhaps getting worse, and have already moved past the first few weeks postpartum.

Susan Stone at Perinatal Pro adds to that list the misrepresentation in the media of postpartum mental illness. Compared to the consistently bedraggled, crazy-looking, blank-eyed moms portrayed on TV, many of us can function and present ourselves in a way that hides our underlying misery. Because of this,we think wedon't have an illness requiring professional help.

"There are mothers who may have a pregnancy-related mood disorder but think that because their symptoms do not equal the extreme drama portrayed in such [entertainment] stories, they do not have postpartum depression or another affective pregnancy-related disorder. They may conclude that their suffering is insufficient to warrant intervention and compassion. These are the mothers who know that something is wrong, but compare themselves to these extremely rare depictions and think they are just "blue" and attempt to tough it out — week after hellish week. So months of silent anguish continue and the potential joy of motherhood is lost to the woman, her infant and her family."

None of these reasons for waiting to reach out for help is acceptable. It's not worth the future pain we may cause ourselves.

Karen Kleiman, author of "This Isn't What I Expected" and many other great books on our illnesses, wrote about this issue recently in a commenton my post on deciding whether to take meds during pregnancy:

"Sometimes people feel that a risk is greater if they 'do' something or take action, as opposed to just letting things be. Like, 'If I get on that airplane during the storm, the risk will be greater than if I don't go.' That seems pretty clear.

Conversely, there are times when the risk is in fact higher when no action is taken, such as the decision not to do anything in response to having chest pains.

This is the case with women who are pregnant or postpartum. Women who are deciding whether or not to take medication are understandably unsettled by having to made this decision. Often they feel if they "take" the medication, they are taking an action, or engaging in behavior, or making a choice that increases the risk, or so they believe. Thus, they feel it would be better to do nothing.

But we know that in many of these cases, it is NOT better to do nothing and NOT TAKING ACTION can be detrimental; it can significantly increase the risk potential, particularly for women who are severely ill.

So it's a perception thing. We perceive the risk to be greater if we take action. 'If I put this pill in my mouth I will be hurting myself or my baby.' But it's a faulty perception. Sometimes, the risk is much greater when we do not act."

Exactly. There are a variety of effective treatments. Go talk to a professional to see if you need one. Act.

For another piece on this topic, visit "The Myth of Wishing PPD Away".