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Overview

Estradiol — the main form of estrogen during your reproductive years — directly regulates dopamine, the neurotransmitter most central to ADHD. When estradiol drops, dopamine synthesis, release, and transporter activity all go down with it.

There are some things you can do to help, such as talk to your doctor about increasing medication doses during low estrogen days or exploring hormone replacement therapy if you are ~35. 

  • If you have PMDD, follow the nutrition guidelines in my PMDD Nutrition Guide to scientifically reduce your severity. It works best with other stress reduction habits, but nutrition is a good place to start. 

Wait, why hasn’t anyone mentioned hormones in my ADHD diagnosis?

Girls and women with ADHD tend to look different, but until recently, we didn’t have much research on it. Since it’s been mainly studied in boys, the more predominant female presentations mean many women don’t get diagnosed until adulthood, if at all. Of course, the reason why we weren’t studied as much was because of our hormone fluctuations, but that’s another rabbit hole.

Because of this, ADHD in women is often misdiagnosed as depression, anxiety, or cyclical bipolar. Why? Likely because ADHD for us isn’t always stable. Symptoms fluctuate. And those fluctuations frequently track with the menstrual cycle — worse before a period, better in the middle of the month, back to harder around ovulation or into the luteal phase. And if you are going through perimenopause with ADHD? That’s another beast entirely.

What’s worse? This hadn’t really even been considered until the 2020s. In fact, in 2025 Kooij et al. published a paper on just the different research questions future researchers should study regarding women and ADHD. That being said, we do have some research, so let’s break it down.

What does dopamine have to do with ADHD?

Dopamine is the neurotransmitter most consistently implicated in ADHD. It’s involved in attention, motivation, reward processing, and executive control. The fronto-striatal circuit (prefrontal cortex + striatum) is where most of this plays out. Stimulant medications work primarily by increasing dopaminergic activity in this circuit, and other ADHD medications tend to work on multiple neurotransmitters. 

Other neurotransmitters are also involved with ADHD, like serotonin, norepinephrine, and GABA/glutamate. However, those are less studied – though significantly connected. 

So: dopamine drives a lot of how ADHD is presented. Now, what does estradiol have to do with any of it?

Continued below…


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    How estradiol actually affects dopamine 

    What can you actually do about it?

    1. Talk to your doctor about your medication. If your stimulant feels less effective at certain points in your cycle, you can ask to trial a temporary dose adjustment during low-estrogen days. If your provider needs research, show them this article or send them this new 2026 study on stimulants and female ADHD.

    2. Ask about hormone replacement therapy. If you’re approaching or in perimenopause (~35 for women with ADHD according to new research), HRT may be worth discussing.

    3. If you have PMDD, start with nutrition. Follow the guidelines in my PMDD Nutrition Guide — it won’t eliminate the hormonal fluctuation, but it can meaningfully reduce severity. It works best alongside stress reduction habits, but nutrition is a solid place to begin.

    4. Reduce chronic stress where you can. Chronic stress worsens both ADHD symptoms and hormonal symptoms. This doesn’t have to be dramatic — it might mean re-evaluating what you’ve committed to, building more rest into your week, or starting talk therapy with a licensed therapist.

    5. Move your body, especially cardiovascularly. Research on both ADHD and perimenopause (connected with lower/fluctuations in estrogen) points to cardio as one of the most consistently helpful interventions for symptom severity. Cognitively engaging movement — dancing, rock climbing, yoga, martial arts — is especially useful for ADHD, but even walking counts.

    6. Look at your diet. There are specific dietary changes that may help reduce hormonal symptom severity. For estrogen support specifically, read How To Ease Perimenopausal Symptoms Using Food.

    7. Find a community. Often the difference between being able to do things and not is being around fellow ADHDers who get it. Medication can only get us so far some days. 

    If that’s you, you need to join the Neurodiverse Neighborhood. We built it because we realized that so many of us have tried everything except for the one thing that works: a specialized, engaged ADHD community. And we couldn’t find it anywhere else. 

    For $23USD a month, you get more research, more accountability, and more results than most people get from programs ten times the price. Why? Because it was what we needed when we were struggling.

    And we want you there too. 

    For all the neurodiverse people who want to find themselves beyond the limitations the world (and ourselves) have put on us, join our neighborhood. Annika, Matt Rackaelboom, and other large ADHD creators are in there weekly with research, recipes, body doubling, coaching, and a thriving community of people who get it. 

    Become our neighbor <3: Use code ANNIKA for 15% off your first month!

    This article summarizes the research from the aforementioned studies and the author’s knowledge. It is for educational purposes only. Nothing in this article constitutes medical advice.


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