Skip to content

Get Experience Life delivered to your door

Experience Life
Delivered every two months

Real Health. No Hype.

More than 600,000 subscribers trust us to keep them informed, inspired, and authentically healthy. Join them.

How Does Chamomile Support PMS Symptoms?

This traditional herbal remedy may help relieve menstrual cramps and alleviate PMS symptoms by reducing cortisol levels. Learn more.

chamomile tea and flowers

An herbal treatment used in both traditional European and Mexican medicine, chamomile may help regulate depression and anxiety. “Stress is the biggest factor that can worsen PMS symptoms. So many hormonal problems in women are due to the downstream effects of cortisol,” says functional-medicine physician Sara Szal Gottfried, MD, author of The Hormone Cure. “Cortisol is a bully, and if it is high, it impacts all the other hormones in our bodies. Addressing your cortisol response and finding ways to manage your stress is probably the most important first step you can take to balance your hormones.” (For more counsel on balancing cortisol levels, see “How to Balance Your Cortisol Levels Naturally.”)

Chamomile has been linked with cortisol reduction, so your evening cup of tea may help lower overall cortisol levels in your body. The herb’s antispasmodic properties may also offer relief from menstrual cramps.

Herbalist and midwife Aviva Romm, MD, recommends taking a daily chamomile tincture from the week following ovulation to the onset of your period.

A word of caution: Chamomile can be estrogenic, so those with a history of hormone-sensitive cancers like breast, uterine, or ovarian cancer — as well as those who are pregnant or breastfeeding — should steer clear of this herb. People with ragweed allergies also shouldn’t take chamomile, because it’s a member of the daisy family and could cause a reaction.

More Natural Remedies for PMS

Try the lifestyle changes and 10 plant-based remedies for premenstrual syndrome and period pain at “What Are Some Natural Remedies for PMS?,” from which this article was excerpted,

Camille Berry is a wine and food writer based in San Francisco.

Share

More like this

Eating for Your Cycle: How Food Can Transform Your Hormonal Health

Here are four recipes that cover the menstrual, follicular, ovulatory, and luteal phases of your menstrual cycle.
By Lauren Chambers 

8 Known Causes of Endometriosis

From hormonal imbalances and genetics to environmental toxins and immune dysfunction, these interconnected factors can contribute to endometriosis. Go deeper.
By Mo Perry

Can I Plan Around the Phases of My Menstrual Cycle to Boost Athletic Performance?

Learn how to use cycle syncing to get the most from your fitness routine.
By Maggie Fazeli Fard

Can Workouts Affect Menstruation?

Expert answers on why working out and strength training can help with adverse side effects of your menstrual cycle.
By Andrew Heffernan

Share a thought

0 Comments

Keep the conversation going

Leave a comment, ask a question, or see what others are talking about in the Life Time Health Facebook group.

Facebook Group

Advertisement

Back To Top