Can you get nauseous before your period

Feeling sick or vomiting during your period is really unpleasant. In this article, we’ll talk about what causes menstrual nausea and what you can do to relieve the symptoms.

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Nausea from your period: are the two connected?

Nausea during your period is a common symptom linked to substances known as prostaglandins. Normally, among many other things, prostaglandins help your body launch an inflammatory response to pathogens. During your period, they help your uterus contract, shedding the lining. As a side effect, they can make you feel nauseous during your period, sometimes leading to vomiting, diarrhea, and headaches.

Nausea during your period can also be caused by a mild fluctuation of sex hormones, which prompts the stomach to overproduce gastric juices containing hydrochloric acid. This can cause mild heartburn or, in extreme cases, vomiting. 

Your period may also come with a migraine, which can also cause nausea.

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How to alleviate period sickness

If menstrual nausea has you feeling down, don’t worry — there are several ways to treat it. There are several possible causes of nausea during menstruation:

  • Changes in the levels of hormones that sometimes initiate the overproduction of gastric juice, which contains hydrochloric acid
  • Your body’s reaction to the release of prostaglandins, which cause cramping not only in the uterus but also in the stomach

You can make some dietary changes to help you with nausea. Avoid fatty or spicy foods (opt for small portions of bland food instead), avoid intense odors, and stay hydrated. Ginger, chamomile, and mint tea may help calm your stomach. Take small sips of cold, clear, carbonated, or sour drinks. 

You can also try an antacid. It can help alleviate symptoms by neutralizing hydrochloric acid. 

Relieving the cramps may also relieve your nausea. Applying heat (like a hot water bottle) may reduce pain in your lower abdomen. Physical activity may also ease your pain in some cases. 

If these methods are not enough, you can try over-the-counter or prescription pain medicine from your health care provider. Make sure to consult with your health care provider before taking any medication.

Can you get nauseous before your period

Credit...Aileen Son for The New York Times

Ask Well

Researchers don’t fully understand the menstrual cycle’s effects on the immune system, but experts say there are reasons some may feel sick at certain points.

Credit...Aileen Son for The New York Times

  • May 3, 2022

Q: Does a woman’s immune system weaken at certain times of her menstrual cycle? I have always noticed that if I get sick, it’s almost always just before I get my period.

Experts say that while there isn’t enough data to prove that you’re more likely to feel sick before or during your period, there are some hints that it is possible. Emerging research suggests that the immune system can fluctuate during this time, sometimes exacerbating underlying chronic disease symptoms or creating new ones that some women may mistake as signs of a new illness.

Just before a period, for instance, some women report symptoms typically associated with the flu, like body aches, malaise and even fever. This so-called period flu isn’t caused by an actual pathogen, said Dr. Taraneh Shirazian, a gynecologist at N.Y.U. Langone Health. But it can be the result of a person’s immune response to natural inflammation as the uterus cramps and sheds cells. “It’s how your body perceives the inflammation,” she said.

Hormones may also be to blame for these symptoms, Dr. Shirazian said. Luteinizing hormone, or L.H., surges just before ovulation and then sharply drops when a period starts, she said. As L.H. levels shift, people can experience fatigue, bloating, headaches and nausea. “Some women go through this with really aggressive symptoms every cycle, every month,” Dr. Shirazian said.

In a 2018 review in partnership with the period-tracking app Clue, researchers also noted that in women with certain underlying illnesses — like inflammatory bowel diseases, epilepsy and autoimmune disorders — symptoms associated with the illnesses sometimes worsened during ovulation, improved about a week later and worsened again during menstruation.

This, said Sabra Klein, a microbiologist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, could be the result of seesawing hormones and immune system changes over the course of a period.

Other research has found that between 19 and 40 percent of women with asthma have reported more intense and frequent asthma flare-ups or attacks right before or during their periods. Perimenstrual asthma, as it’s called, has been linked to increases in asthma-related emergency department visits and hospitalizations, including intubations.

Some small studies have also shown that women with multiple sclerosis reported worsening symptoms right before or during their periods. And patients with lupus have reported more pain and fatigue around their menstrual cycles.

The evolutionary function of the menstrual cycle is to give women an opportunity to become pregnant, said Dr. Kimberly Keefe Smith, a ​reproductive endocrinologist and gynecologist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston. When fertilization does occur, some parts of the immune system are suppressed so that the body does not reject the fetus.

During the menstrual cycle, the ovaries secrete estrogen and progesterone, which affect different branches of the immune system in different ways depending on the part of the body. Progesterone, in particular, can be an immunosuppressant when present at high levels in the body, like during pregnancy, Dr. Keefe Smith said.But estrogen and progesterone alone can’t explain a weakened immune system, she added; patients who receive extra doses of the hormones during certain medical treatments or while on birth control, for example, are not more susceptible to feeling sick.

Without definitive data, scientists can’t provide clear guidance on how women should think about their chances of feeling sick based on their cycles.

“This has been grossly understudied,” Dr. Klein said. “I can’t really tell you if you’re more likely to get a cold or have infections, because the more detailed studies just haven’t been done.”

While additional research is needed to better understand how the menstrual cycle influences disease susceptibility, she added that if you consistently find yourself feeling sick at a certain point in your cycle, don’t ignore it. You can take steps to protect your health leading up to your period: Make sure you’re eating a balanced diet, getting enough sleep and washing your hands for at least 20 seconds. “Every woman knows their body best,” Dr. Klein said.

Is nausea before period normal?

Some people experience nausea just before they get their period. This is common and is not usually a cause for concern. Nausea before a period could be caused by many factors, including cramps, premenstrual syndrome (PMS), and pregnancy.

Does nausea mean my period is coming?

Some people come to expect nausea before or during a period — it is a normal, common symptom of premenstrual syndrome (PMS), which is the body's natural response to the menstrual cycle. However, nausea is also a symptom of premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD), a more severe form of PMS.