If you're suffering from a short temper, killer PMS symptoms, and heavy periods, you might be experiencing estrogen dominance. Read on to learn more about how to treat estrogen dominance, what causes it, and more.
What is estrogen dominance?
Estrogen dominance is a hormonal imbalance characterized by estrogen levels that are elevated in comparison to your other sex hormones. This means that there may be an overproduction of estrogen, or that other sex hormones such as progesterone are too low, which would result in an elevated estrogen-progesterone ratio.
In turn, these relatively high levels of estrogen can lead to a cascade of negative effects throughout your entire body that range from headaches and mood swings to heavy periods and fertility problems.
The range of symptoms resulting from estrogen dominance (which we’ll dive into below) are due, in part, to the interconnected nature of hormones: they all affect each other, and when one is out of whack, others often follow.
“Our sex hormones, including estrogen, progesterone, testosterone, DHEA, and cortisol, come from our ovaries and adrenals—and they all talk to each other as well as interact with other important hormones like thyroid hormone, insulin, and melatonin,” says Parsley's Dawn Johnson, DO, an expert in hormonal health.
Additionally, all organs, including your brain, muscles, bones, heart, blood vessels, lungs, and gut, have a special place designated just for estrogen called an estrogen receptor, explains Dr. Johnson. “So, when we have too much estrogen and our hormones get out of balance, it can affect all of these areas,” she says.
While estrogen dominance is not an official diagnosis (and thus doesn’t have any official statistics on how many people are affected), Dr. Johnson says that in her professional experience it’s an incredibly common hormonal imbalance and can occur at any age and any stage of life, but that it’s particularly common among certain groups, including during pre- and perimenopause, when you're more likely to experience periodic surges and lulls in estrogen production, as well as in people who carry extra weight or body fat, since estrogen is made in our fat cells.