For one week every month, she becomes a different person. It starts about seven days before her period. She wakes up in tears for no reason. She snaps at her husband and children over small things. She feels hopeless, angry, and exhausted all at the same time. She has thoughts she would never have at any other time of the month — thoughts about running away, thoughts about ending her life, thoughts that terrify her when she remembers them later. Then her period arrives, and within a day or two, she is back to her normal self, as if nothing had happened. She has been living this way for fifteen years. Her doctor said it was just PMS. Her mother said every woman goes through this. Her husband said she was being dramatic. Nobody told her that what she has is a specific medical condition called PMDD — premenstrual dysphoric disorder — and that it has specific, effective treatments.
If this sounds like your life, please keep reading. At Bharosa, we see women with PMDD every week in our LB Nagar OPD. Most of them have been dismissed for years with the words just PMS. PMDD is not just PMS. It is a severe and disabling condition that affects millions of women, and it responds well to proper treatment. If your monthly cycle is destroying parts of your life, you deserve to be taken seriously and treated properly.
Premenstrual syndrome (PMS) is common. Up to 75 percent of women experience some mild to moderate symptoms before their period — bloating, breast tenderness, irritability, mood changes, food cravings, or fatigue. These symptoms are uncomfortable but usually manageable. They do not stop women from living their normal lives.
Premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD) is different. It is a severe form of premenstrual distress that affects about 3 to 8 percent of women of reproductive age. The symptoms are much more intense than PMS, they specifically include significant mood disturbance, and they cause major problems with daily life, work, or relationships. PMDD is formally recognised by the American Psychiatric Association in its diagnostic manual as a genuine psychiatric condition.
The World Health Organization has also recognised PMDD in its International Classification of Diseases. The International Association for Premenstrual Disorders, the leading global organisation for PMDD advocacy and education, has done extensive work to raise awareness and support affected women.
PMDD symptoms appear in the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle — the one to two weeks before the period starts. They include severe mood symptoms — deep depression, hopelessness, intense irritability, anger, anxiety, and sudden mood swings. They also include physical symptoms — fatigue, sleep problems, changes in appetite, bloating, and headaches. Cognitive symptoms can include difficulty concentrating, feeling out of control, and feeling overwhelmed by everyday tasks.
The defining feature of PMDD is that the symptoms are clearly tied to the menstrual cycle. They begin in the luteal phase, peak just before the period, and improve within a few days of menstruation starting. During the rest of the cycle — the follicular phase — the woman feels normal. This cyclical pattern is what distinguishes PMDD from depression or anxiety disorders that are present all the time.
For many women with PMDD, the experience is like being held hostage for one or two weeks every month by a version of themselves they do not recognise. Relationships suffer. Work suffers. Self-esteem suffers, because they often feel deep shame about how they behaved during the worst days. Some women plan their lives around their cycle — avoiding important events, meetings, or decisions during the luteal phase. This is not weakness. It is a real medical condition that deserves proper treatment.
Research suggests that PMDD is not caused by abnormal hormone levels. Women with PMDD usually have normal hormone levels. The difference seems to be in how their brains respond to normal hormonal fluctuations. Specifically, their brains may be more sensitive to changes in oestrogen and progesterone, which affect the neurotransmitters — particularly serotonin — that regulate mood.
There is a genetic component. PMDD tends to run in families. Women with a history of depression, anxiety, or trauma are also at increased risk. This does not mean PMDD is caused by weakness or mental unfitness. It means the underlying biology is real and measurable, and that your brain is not making this up.
Indian cultural attitudes often treat menstruation as a private topic that is not discussed openly. Period-related distress is normalised — every woman suffers, it is the price of being a woman, just be patient. These attitudes prevent women from recognising when their experience goes beyond ordinary PMS. Many of our PMDD patients tell us they did not realise their suffering was unusual until they finally spoke to a doctor who took them seriously.
There is also significant stigma around mental health, which makes women hesitant to seek psychiatric care for symptoms that appear to be just physical. A woman whose life falls apart for one week every month often blames herself — she should be stronger, she should be more patient, she should be more controlled. She rarely considers that a proper medical diagnosis and treatment might change everything. This blog exists to challenge that assumption.
A proper PMDD diagnosis usually involves tracking symptoms for at least two menstrual cycles. The doctor will ask the patient to keep a daily symptom diary, noting which symptoms appear and when. This helps confirm the cyclical pattern — symptoms in the luteal phase, improvement after the period begins — and rules out other conditions like depression or anxiety that are present throughout the month.
A full assessment also looks at other possible causes — thyroid problems, anaemia, chronic stress, and other medical conditions that can mimic or worsen PMDD symptoms. A good psychiatrist will not rush the diagnosis. Getting it right matters because treatment depends on the correct diagnosis.
There are several effective treatments for PMDD, often used alone or in combination.
First line — selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs). Medications like fluoxetine, sertraline, and escitalopram are highly effective for PMDD. Unlike their use for depression, SSRIs for PMDD can often be taken only during the luteal phase — the one to two weeks before the period — rather than continuously. Many women experience significant improvement within one or two cycles of starting treatment.
Hormonal approaches — certain contraceptive pills, particularly those containing drospirenone, can help some women by suppressing the hormonal fluctuations that trigger symptoms. This is typically managed jointly with a gynaecologist.
Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) — specifically adapted for PMDD, helps women develop coping strategies, manage emotional symptoms, and reduce the impact of the condition on relationships and work.
Lifestyle measures — regular exercise, adequate sleep, stress management, and nutritional adjustments can help reduce symptom severity, though they are usually not sufficient on their own for severe cases.
For women with very severe PMDD who do not respond to other treatments, more intensive options exist, including hormone-suppressing medications. These are used only in selected cases under specialist care.
At Bharosa, our consultant MD Psychiatrists take PMDD seriously. We begin with a thorough assessment — proper symptom tracking, a complete history, and where needed, coordination with gynaecology for medical testing. We explain the diagnosis clearly so the patient understands what is happening in her body.
Treatment typically combines appropriate medication with CBT, adapted specifically for PMDD. We support the patient through the first few cycles of treatment, adjusting as needed, and making sure the approach is working.
What our PMDD patients often tell us, after a few months of proper treatment, is that they feel like themselves all month for the first time in years. The cyclical dread lifts. Their relationships improve. They stop losing one or two weeks of every month to symptoms that nobody had ever properly diagnosed. This is what good PMDD care delivers, and it is available in Hyderabad today.
Q: Is PMDD a real medical condition?
A: Yes. It is formally recognised by the American Psychiatric Association and the World Health Organization.
Q: How is it different from PMS?
A: PMDD is much more severe and specifically includes significant mood disturbance that disrupts life.
Q: Do I need medication for life?
A: Many women take medication only during the luteal phase, and some discontinue once symptoms are well-controlled.
Q: Will PMDD go away after menopause?
A: Usually, yes. Symptoms typically end with the menstrual cycle.
Q: Does Bharosa treat PMDD in Hyderabad?
A: Yes. Women's mental health care is available at our LB Nagar facility.
If one week of every month is destroying your life, it is not just PMS. Bharosa takes it seriously in Hyderabad. Call +91 95050 58886.