Severe PMS! Ten Days To Freedom
WHAT IS PMS?
For a lot of women, the time before menstruation may be filled with intense physical and emotional discomfort initiated by chemical-hormonal changes in the body. Nevertheless, the condition and reason for it needs additional discovery.
PreMenstrual Syndrome (PMS) symptoms can be dreadfully disturbing. However, they can be remedied and equilibrium can be established. In truth, an expert master herbalist, with a long established practice, apprenticed in multiple modalities of herbology including Chinese medicine, can promptly remedy PMS and impact the basic causation, naturally. It is reasonable to expect initial relief within 2 hours unless the individual has a long term illness. Long-lasting PMS conditions will reasonably take 45 – 90 days.
PMS Imbalances fall into three categories:
- Mild Menstrual symptoms – symptoms do not interfere with daily activities.
- Moderate PMS symptoms – symptoms observably upset some of the activities of daily living.
- Severe Premenstrual Imbalance – extreme symptoms which interrupt
many activities of daily living (ADL).
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TYPICAL PHYSICAL SYMPTOMS |
TYPICAL EMOTIONAL SYMPTOMS |
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Click here for more PreMenstrual Syndrome information. THE REAL UNDERLYING PROBLEM HAS TO DO with the blood being clogged up and polluted. Probably, since the internal organs have become stressed, the liver ceases to filter the blood while the spleen doesn’t have the energy to move the blood as usual. Any stress or extreme life habit can disturb them easily. The above link goes to solutions that reverse this stress and aging process.
Additional PMS FACTS
- Scientific research has not determined the specific cause of PMS. All the same, PMS is understood to be connected to both neuro-psychological and hormonal factors. The common element between the factors is the blood and its quality.
- {PMS is most prevalent among women in their late 20s to early 40s, with at least one child, or with a past history of either postpartum depression or an emotional disorder}.
- PMS is estimated to affect 75% of the women during their childrearing years.
- 5 – 7% of women have been determined to suffer from severe PMS.
- 50 – 60% of women suffering from extreme PMS also experience emotional imbalances – depression, anxiety, compulsive behaviors, insomnia, and migraines.
- Women, with the usual menstrual cycle, can also be affected by PMS.
- PMS may happen in women with normal progesterone and estrogen levels.
Tags: Anxiety, cramps, hormone imbalance, insomnia, palpitations, PMDD, PMS, Pre-Menstrual Syndrome
This entry was posted on Wednesday, October 28th, 2009 at 9:26 am and is filed under pregnancy. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.