Apps Can Help Girls Manage When Hormones Affect ADHD Symptoms
When girls with ADHD enter puberty, the changes they experience extend beyond the descriptions offered in health class. The fluctuations and physical changes brought on by hormones in adolescence can make managing symptoms difficult. These, in turn, affect executive functions like focus, motivation, impulsivity, and the ability to regulate emotions.
One tool available to manage some of their new executive function challenges is a period-tracking smartphone app. Tracking can help girls and women understand how monthly cycles in their hormones affect ADHD symptoms.
Tracking their menstrual cycles can help girls predict when they will have their period and the days when their ADHD symptoms may get worse. Apps can also record when they experience fatigue, backaches, cramps, headaches, as well as increases in anxiety, changes in mood, and disruption to sleep that are tied to their cycle. Awareness can help them plan for possible changes in ADHD symptoms during their menstrual cycles. Knowing when their symptoms may get worse can better equip them to handle upcoming executive function and emotional challenges.
Puberty, hormones, and ADHD symptoms
The number of girls diagnosed with ADHD increased dramatically when the diagnostic criteria for onset of symptoms was increased from seven to twelve, says Ellen B. Littman, PhD, a clinical psychologist.
“This surge,” says Dr. Littman, “occurred because most girls with ADHD exhibit more prominent symptoms after puberty, following the release of estrogen.”
This may explain why ADHD symptoms seem to increase during certain times of their menstrual cycle, along with an increase in co-occurring conditions like anxiety or depression.
The fluctuations in estrogen have been shown to affect executive function, says Linda Roggli, an ADHD coach and author of Confessions of an ADDiva: Midlife in the Non-Linear Lane.
“For some women with ADHD, this drop in estrogen at ovulation can mean ADHD symptoms increase and executive functions take a nosedive,” Roggli says. Girls should be aware that it’s not only during ovulation—the midpoint of one’s cycle—but the week before her period when she may see the biggest increase in ADHD symptoms.
Many adult women also find it helpful to use an app to track those same hormone-related executive function fluctuations throughout the month.
Apps like Flo, Clue, Cycles, and M. Calendar can help track days during the month when women might feel more anxious or find it harder to focus or accomplish tasks. Some apps can even send reminders on days when it’s likely they may experience dips in mood or energy or have feelings of frustration and fatigue. That way she is not caught by surprise if she’s feeling more irritable, anxious, or tired.
Let your daughter know that tracking her period alone doesn’t act as contraception. Some apps can help her keep track of whether she’s taken prescribed birth control, however, which may be useful if she has a hard time remembering to take medication. When looking for apps together, this can be an opportunity to discuss your family’s values and expectations when it comes to dating and possible sexual activity and safer sex.
Keep in mind that some apps do have costs, especially if you’re looking for ones without advertising attached. Some apps share de-personalized information with researchers or advertisers that may make them poor choices for use by your daughter.
Becoming in tune with one’s body
Using an app, a smartphone calendar, or recording symptoms in a period diary is a great way for girls to learn their body’s signals throughout the month. These apps provide an opportunity to connect how she feels, physical changes, and ADHD symptoms throughout the month. She can then plan to exercise more, limit time on devices, get more sleep, and include more protein, fruits, and vegetables in her meals. Knowing when her period will most likely occur can help her to be aware of any increased irritability, difficulties focusing, or trouble completing assignments.
One young woman with ADHD shared on social media how a period app helps her manage executive function difficulties brought on by fluctuations in hormones.
“I now know what week of the month is going to be harder, so I can prepare for it and be easier on myself because I know it will pass,” she writes. “I can’t stop it, but knowing how it affects me and when my period is coming helps me feel ready for the challenges.”
If you are a mom who has ADHD, it might also be helpful to talk with your daughter about how ADHD affects you. Let her know what things help you and what to avoid because it doesn’t help. She will also be better able to care for herself and understand how her body works if she has an example from someone she knows well.
“Have empathy for what your body and brain are going through,” advises another woman who opened up on social media when discussing her calendar app. “If you are getting distracted or tasks are taking much longer than usual, give yourself grace that you are even trying at such a hard time.”
Further Reading:
- ADHD in Women and Girls
- Symptoms of ADHD in Women and Girls
- Those Lovely Mones: The Intersection of ADHD and Hormones
- Gender Myths and ADHD
- Why is ADHD More Challenging for Women
- Girls With ADHD Internalize Struggles