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Beating PMSBy:
No matter how well I seem to be doing on my diet, every month right before my I get my period I become irritable and bloated and have unbearable cravings; then, when I give in to them, I get even more depressed than I already am. Is this all in my head? Or is there something I can do about it?
If there's any one subject that seems to come up with precision regularity during the three years I've been doing the iVillage Shape Up program, it's got to be the dreaded PMS. I can't think of anything that has derailed more good intentions than the multi-symptomed nightmare that used to be euphemistically referred to as "that time of month." Experts are hardly in agreement about the causes and treatments of PMS, but let me share with you what, in my opinion, is the best available information.
Up to 150 different symptoms have been linked with PMS. They can range from barely noticeable to downright debilitating. And to this day, although PMS has been a well-researched entity since at least the 1980s (if not before), many physicians still believe that it doesn't really exist and that it is "all in your mind."
Well, it's not.
Before your period, there are powerful hormonal upsets that influence mood, craving and water retention and, for some people, create maddeningly difficult emotional personality changes. There is no single cause that explains PMS in every case. PMS seems to have at least four "types." Obviously each of these "types" is shorthand for a constellation of symptoms, but here's an easy way to remember them: A for anxiety, B for bloating (sometimes called H for hydration), C for cramps and D for depression. Some folks like to add the all-too-familiar fifth type, E (for everything).
That there is a nutritional link to PMS seems almost unarguable. Researchers have shown that the typical PMS sufferer consumes 275 percent more sugar, 62 percent more refined carbohydrates, 78 percent more sodium, 79 percent more dairy products, 52 percent less zinc, 77 percent less magnesium and 53 percent less iron than non-PMS sufferers.
Is there a nutritional "cure" for this complex hormonal-neurotransmitter stew? Well, I don't know anyone who would make that claim, but there sure are some prudent strategies. Here are some of the best.
Above all, be good to yourself, experiment with these strategies and give them enough time to work.
It'll be worth the effort.
Got a question or comment for Jonny? Post it on the Shape Up message board!
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Advice from Dr. Nancy Snyderman
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