First of all, I empathize with you. This was me at a time in my life, and I hear you and see you! Now, what do I generally recommend, personally and professionally:
As a RD, I gotta do my due diligence and recommend medical evaluation.
If a serious medical problem is underlying, it needs to be diagnosed and managed. Assuming the scary stuff gets ruled out, the management of painful periods (formally called “dysmenorrhea”) does not 100% percent of the time have to be hormonal birth control. As the title of this blog says, we are going to discuss holistic approaches to painful periods. I also think it’s important that a work up for Endometriosis gets explored with your Doctor.
Hormonal birth control CAN be a solid symptom management option and for some females it is effective at reducing pain, but prescribing it as the doctor and taking it as the patient doesn’t inherently figure out the “WHY” behind the painful periods.
And the WHY is not always a ICD-10 code diagnosis (aka label for something that is medically diagnosable).
The WHY can be lifestyle and nutrition related so a pill cannot identically replace diet and lifestyle measures.
So first, find an OB/GYN who listens and does a work up before hastily going to the pill that gets thrown at just about every female problem after a 2 minute conversation (painful periods, PMS, PMDD, Endometriosis, Uterine Fibroids, PCOS, Menstual migraines, heavy menstrual periods, no menstrual periods, etc…)
I am not anti hormonal birth control; there is no shame in taking it and it definitely fits the bill for contraceptive purposes.
What myself and many other Functional Medicine aligned practitioners want to say is that hormonal birth control can be ONE option on the table but it shouldn’t be advised as the ONLY option, especially when it comes to those who don’t want or can’t take hormonal birth control. (I was one of them – continued to cause migraine with aura after trying 10 different hormonal birth control pills in my 20s; this was well before I knew what Functional Medicine was).
So assuming the scary stuff has been ruled out after seeing a doctor, now back to the nutrition and lifestyle related rationales for “WHY could menustrual cramps present?” And to be crystal clear, painful periods are NOT normal. They are common, but not normal. It has just sadly been societally accepted as just a part of being a female.
The following nutrition related topics can contribute to period pain.
And while the following below may not fit criteria for a ICD-10 label, they are valid nutrition related concerns and warrant addressing. And they are topics that are best addressed with diet and lifestyle.
Okay: so now here we go with nutrition consult topics for painful periods that I vet thoroughly with my patients:
We got some options. Is thee above a lot to take in? No worries – I have created a dysmenorrhea protocol with all the dosing and instructions.
Consider this list above for those looking for pointers on a holistic work up and then a holistic route to help improve painful periods.
Painful periods are a CHECK ENGINE LIGHT. See both your doctor and a dietitian for studied ways to get you feeling better that ideally address the root issue, which is often nutrition (or lack there of) related.
This is the tip of the iceberg on studies that support holistic ways to care for dysmenorrhea. I love the PubMed database which is free and there is a lot you can read through yourself on this topic.
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July 30, 2023
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